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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 19, 2024

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Seattle's district hasn't elected a Republican representative since the seventies, it is fully a one party polity. The only distinction is within flavors of democrats. In my experience, the most pro-homeless people are white, and Asians have much less sympathy for letting people colonize the streets.

You've elided the point. Even in uber-liberal Seattle, the share of Whites voting for Democrats is lesser than the share of Asians, of Blacks, of Hispanics, of...

I haven't elided the point.

Nobody who wants to win in Seattle runs as a Republican. Do you think it's the blacks' fault that Seattle hasn't elected a Republican in 44 years? Or the asians'? No, this is the will of the whites who live there.

I wasn't able to find a lot of good data, but here is one post: https://www.google.com/amp/s/southseattleemerald.com/2022/12/09/how-race-and-class-converged-in-the-2022-elections-in-seattle/%3famp

However, those rightward shifts among BIPOC are not uniform. Asian-Americans in South Seattle are shifting harder to the right than Black people are, which follows national trends. Additionally, People of Color in South Seattle and SKC are disproportionately getting redder whereas People of Color in the Eastside suburbs are actually shifting blue. This means class is a catalyst for Republican gains among People of Color: working class voters of color are shifting red while wealthier voters of color are not, but even getting bluer.

This is especially noticeable in the Chinatown-International District, where GOP fear tactics have helped shift this neighborhood dramatically to the right (although, noticeably, the Little Saigon part of the CID got bluer while the Chinese parts west of I-5 got much redder).

That is, parts of Seattle that are more likely to vote for Republicans are those that live in areas with less white people.