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NewGeography.com
- February 10, 2012
Sex, Singles And The
Presidency
By
Joel Kotkin
By all accounts both
President Barack Obama
and his likely
challenger, former
Massachusetts Gov. Mitt
Romney, are ideal family
men, devoted to their
spouses and their
children. But support
for the two men could
not be more different in
terms of the
electorate’s marriage
and family status.
An analysis comparing
the results of the 2008
election and the most
recent Gallup surveys
with data by demographer
Wendell Cox
shows a remarkable
correlation between the
states and regions with
the highest proportion
of childless women under
45 – the best
indicator of
offspring-free
households — and the
propensity to vote
Democratic. Overall, the
most child-free regions
were nearly 85% more
likely to vote for Obama
in 2008. And according
to the most recent
Gallup survey, they are
similarly inclined to
vote Democratic today.
At the top of the list,
with 80% of its women
under 45 without
children, stands the
rock-solid blue District
of Columbia. Just behind
that taxpayer-financed
paradise the six states
with the highest
percentages —
Massachusetts, New York,
Rhode Island, Hawaii,
Vermont and California —
also skew Democratic.
In each of these states
the percentage of
childless women exceeds
55%.
The highest percentage
of offspring-free women
under 45 can be seen as
well in such
Democratic metropolitan
areas as Boston, San
Francisco, Los Angeles,
San Diego and New York
In each of these
metropolitan areas
the percentage of
childless woman reached
a minimum of 60%
well above the national
average of 53%. In the
urban cores of these
regions the percentage
can approach
Washington’s 80% figure.
To a large extent,
childlessness correlates
with high density and a
less affordable housing
stock.
The top child-bearing
regions are almost all
deep-red Republican,
both in 2008 as well as
today. The top five
child-bearing states —
Mississippi, Idaho,
Wyoming , Oklahoma and
Arkansas — all generally
tilt toward the GOP. So
do the metropolitan
areas that have the
lowest percentages of
childless women:
the Texas metros of
Dallas-Fort Worth, San
Antonio and Houston,
Mormon stronghold Salt
Lake City and Memphis.
The next five include
right-leaning
Indianapolis, Charlotte,
Louisville,
Riverside-San Bernardino
and Oklahoma City.
These numbers would be
more striking if not for
the somewhat higher
propensity for
child-bearing among
African-Americans and
Latinos, two core
Democratic
constituencies. As
other surveys have shown, Republicans
gains in recent years
have come largely
from married white
families. In contrast,
Democrats have lost the
support of married
people overall
since 2008, even while
gaining among the
unmarried. If
Republicans can lose
their obsession with
opposing homosexual
families, they might
even garner additional
support.
A growing part of the
Democratic base — aside
from ethnic minorities —
consists of white,
childless couples and,
in particular, single
women. There’s much good
news for Democrats
here. According to the
pro-Democratic advocacy
group Women’s
Voices, Women Vote, almost
two-thirds of this
demographic group voted
for John Kerrey in 2004;
in 2008 they went for
Obama by nearly 70%. In
2010, a generally
unfavorable political
climate for Democrats,
unmarried women helped
power Democratic
victories, particularly
in Colorado and
California, in the
latter case against
female Republican
candidates.
Demographically, at
least in the short and
even medium term,
betting of singles and
the childless couples
seems like a no-brainer.
In the past 30 years the
percentage of women aged
40 to 44 who have never
had children nearly
doubled to 19%. At the
same time singletons of
both sexes are on the
rise, numbering over 31
million strong today, up
from 27 million in
2000,a growth rate
nearly double that of
the overall population.
The increasing role of
the childless may
already be shifting the
Democratic Party toward
the kind of
post-familalistic
secularism generally
associated with Europe
or parts of East Asia.
This could partly
explain why the Obama
Administration has been
so willing to challenge
the Catholic Church — a
traditional home to many
working class Democrats
— on the issue of
offering contraception
to its employees. Simply
put, in Democratic
calculations, secular
singletons may now
outweigh religious
Catholic Democrats.
The importance of
singlehood and
childlessness is
amplified by location.
The greatest bastions of
non-families are found
in the centers of the
country’s media,
cultural and
intellectual life.
Single households
already constitute a
majority in Manhattan
and Washington, and they
are heading in that
direction in Denver,
Seattle and San
Francisco.
The growing
self-confidence of these
post-familial
constituencies is
evident in recent
articles and books
hailing not only the
legitimacy but even the
preference of this
lifestyle option. Kate
Bollick’s much
celebrated and
well-argued
portrayal in the
Atlantic of
attractive matchless,
and childless,
40-something females
celebrates the coming of
age of this new
perspective on family
life.
Bollick , citing the
degraded condition of
today’s males, openly
embraces “the end of
traditional marriage as
an ideal.” One of her
heroines, California
psychologist Bella
DePaulo, dismisses the
traditional family unit
as a kind of mental
malady she labels
“matrimania.” Oh well,
there goes the primary
basis for four thousand
years of civilization.
The Atlantic piece
serves as a kind
manifesto for this key
emerging
Democratic constituency.
But it’s not just single
women now swarming into
the Democratic Party.
NYU Professor
Eric Klineberg’s recent
ode to singleness in
the New York Times
follows a similar
narrative, but has room
for left-leaning male
singletons as well. This
trend is even more
pronounced in
demographically
disintegrating
Europe, a fact that only
increases its appeal to
the sophisticated
denizens of the single
zone.
Are there any risks to
Democrats — and
advantages to
Republicans — in this
new post-familial tilt?
Author and New America
fellow
Phil Longman
argues that in the long
run the
“greater fertility of
conservative segments of
society” could allow the
palpably brain-dead GOP
to inherit the country.
Childless singletons may
be riding high now, he
writes, but as
non-breeders their
influence ends with
their own lifespans.
To win the future,
according to Democratic
activists and Millennial
chroniclers Morley
Winograd and Mike Hais,
Democrats must all
appeal to the next
generation of families.
Many of today’s
childless Millennials
are still under 30 and
plan to have kids,
according to Hais and
Winograd’s survey
research. Reflecting
their own experience
with divorce as
children, 50% consider
being a good parent
their highest priority
in life. A
strong plurality
also see themselves
ending up in the
suburbs.
That means Democrats
could pay a big price
for disdaining
homemakers, the often
unaesthetic chores of
child-raising and
particularly suburbia,
because that’s precisely
the place where many of
today’s urban
Millennials will likely
end up in the next
decade.
To address the future
Millennials, Democrats
don’t need to adopt the
often Medievalist views
of their Republican
rivals. But they will
have to craft a message
that appeals to a
demographic that looks,
at least somewhat, like
the current First
Family.
This piece
originally appeared in Forbes.com.
Joel Kotkin is executive editor of
NewGeography.com and is a distinguished
presidential fellow in urban futures at
Chapman University, and contributing editor
to the City Journal in New York. He is
author of
The City: A Global History.
His newest book is
The Next Hundred Million: America in
2050, released in February,
2010.
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