Minnesota Public Radio - February
20, 2008
Why
Dems rule the city — Republicans, the outer ring
By Curtis Gilbert
You don't have to take a poll to know
there are lots of Democrats in Minneapolis and St. Paul, and far more
Republicans in outer-ring suburbs like Savage or St. Michael. But Minnesota
Public Radio and Humphrey Institute did a poll, and it confirmed a deep
partisan division between the central cities and outer ring suburbs.
t.
Paul, Minn. — Knock on any random door in Minneapolis or St. Paul, and this
poll says 77 percent of the time the person who answers will be a Democrat.
But if you hop in the car and hit the
highway, the political map starts to shift.
As soon as you cross over city limits and
into the suburbs, the percentage of Republicans rises dramatically. It pops
from 8 percent in the city to 39 percent in the inner ring suburbs. Larger
view Poverty rate
"An inner suburb for this survey was a place
that either borders a central city, or any place that borders one of those
places," explains University of Minnesota demographer Thomas Luce.
So Edina would be an inner ring suburb,
because it borders Minneapolis. And Eden Prairie would also be inner ring,
because it borders Edina.
Everything beyond there we'll call outer
ring, all the way to Young America Township, about an hour's drive from
downtown Minneapolis.
And once you get to the outer ring, the
politics shift even more; Republicans outnumber Democrats by a 10 point
margin.
"It's as if the Republicans are a tribe and
they're living in one part of Minnesota, and Democrats are another tribe
living elsewhere," Humphrey Institute political scientist Larry Jacobs
marvels. "It is one of the most striking manifestations of the polarization
in our political world today. We are literally living apart."
But here's the big question: How did it get
to be this way? Larger view Home prices
Is there something about breathing city air
that turns you into a Democrat? Something about the suburbs that breeds
Republicans?
Jacobs doesn't think so. His guess is:
There's something about the city that attracts liberals, and something about
the suburbs — especially the outer ring — that calls to conservatives.
"It's almost as if the Republicans are being
drawn to the big blinking red light, as moths, whereas the Democrats are
being drawn to the big, blinking purple light," Jacobs says.
Mike Beyer, mayor of the outer ring western
suburb of Rockford, says it's obvious why conservatives would prefer his
town to Minneapolis.
"Because you have your space," Beyer says.
"You're not part of an apartment complex, which is a communal area. Communal
to me is social, and social goes to socialism. But here, it's your space,
your time, your business, and that's generally conservative people." Larger
view Racial breakdown
Susan Widmar lived in the suburbs for 13
years, but her liberal heart yearned for the day when she could afford to
buy a nice a house in the city. And finally, four years ago, she and her
husband made the move to St. Paul.
"We felt at home immediately," Widmar says.
"And driving down Summit Ave., and seeing the protestors on the street
corner, it was just like they were there for us — to welcome us home."
Widmar likes the ethnic diversity of the
city, and she feels good about burning less gas than she used to.
"The fact that we can walk two blocks and
get a six pack of beer, and we can hop on the bus and go downtown is all
really attractive to us," she explains. "We don't have to drive our cars
around if we don't want to."
There are a number demographic differences
that also might help explain the preponderance of Democrats in Minneapolis
and St. Paul, proper. One is the racial breakdown. A third of Twin Cities
residents are non-white, and minority groups vote overwhelmingly for the
Democrats. The outer ring is 95 percent white. Larger view Median income
The median household income in the central
cities is also substantially lower than in the outer ring suburbs. In 1999,
it was about $38,000 a year in the cities and $62,000 in the outer ring.
Higher income folks tend to vote Republican.
Joel Kotkin, who studies cities and suburbs
at Chapman University in California, says three or four decades ago, cities
started losing middle-class white people with school-age children. Those
families went seeking the schools, the space and the security of the
suburbs. And that left cities with what Kotkin calls an array of demographic
"niches."
"And that niche tends to be either
minorities, poor people, young people, people without children — all of whom
tend to be much more liberal."
But the suburban picture isn't a static
thing. The outer ring is growing like crazy, with a population that
increased more than 10 percent between 1990 and 2003. And the inner ring is
changing, too.
"The older suburban areas are becoming more
stressed, more poor, more racially diverse, and more like the city than they
are like newly developing suburbs," says former state Sen. Myron Orfield,
DFL-Minneapolis, who now directs the Institute on Race and Poverty at the
University of Minnesota Law School.
Orfield has been studying those trends for
more than a decade, and he says those demographic shifts have put one-time
Republican strongholds up for grabs.
"Gore and Kerry won in Edina, narrowly, and
people 20 years ago never thought that would have been possible," he says.
Kim Foster, 41, has recently noticed her
inner-ring suburb turning blue. When Foster was growing up there, Minnetonka
was predictably Republican. Now, it seems to be swinging to the left.
"I didn't realize it until just a few weeks
ago when we had a neighborhood party," she says.
Foster explains that at some point
conversation turned to the presidential race.
"I would say out of the 20-some people
there, 17 I know for sure were Democrats." She says couldn't wait to get
home and tell her husband about it.
"I truly believed the whole neighborhood was
Republican," Foster says. "So, I'm floored by it."
The inner ring suburbs are still far from
solid DFL territory.
The MPR poll put the inner ring at 54
percent Democrats, 39 percent Republicans. But people in those suburbs have
a tendency to split tickets. Places like Bloomington, Inver Grove Heights,
Coon Rapids and Maple Grove saw a lot of voters check boxes for both
Republicans and Democrats in 2006.
Jacobs, the Humphrey institute political
scientist, says that makes the inner ring a key battleground in this year's
election.
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