As allegations of sexual misconduct against Roy Moore multiply and polls suggest he …
Could Roy Moore flip deep-red Alabama to blue?
byDante Chinni
Could Roy Moore flip deep-red Alabama to blue?
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As allegations of sexual misconduct against
Roy Moore multiply and polls suggest he could lose the senate race he
once led by double-digits, political analysts offer one cautionary
refrain: Remember, it’s Alabama and he’s a Republican.
But a look at Moore’s last general election in
the state shows its voters may be a bit more complicated than that –
and December’s senate race could be as well.
To be certain, Alabama is a deep shade of
Republican red. President Donald Trump won the state by 28 points in
2016. And 42 percent of the state identifies as evangelical Christian,
according to data from the Association of Religion Data Archives. That’s the highest rate in the country and it could be an aid to Moore who is explicitly appealing to evangelical Christians.
Against those numbers, however, consider
Alabama’s 2012 general election results. That ballot featured Republican
Presidential nominee Mitt Romney and Moore as the Republican candidate
for State Supreme Court Chief Justice, and the vote tallies indicate
Moore has some challenges in the state, even with GOP voters.
In 2012, Romney, the definition of an
establishment Republican, actually outperformed Moore, the evangelical
populist, in Alabama by nine points. The former Massachusetts governor
captured 61 percent of the vote in the state, compared to Moore’s 52
percent.
Furthermore, when all the results were in,
Romney won nine more Alabama counties in the presidential race, 52 of
them, than Moore did in his contest, 43.
Even in Moore’s home county of Etowah, Romney
outperformed Moore and by a wide margin, 13 points – 68 percent for
Romney to 55 percent for Moore.
What drove the difference between the Romney
and Moore vote in 2012? The numbers hint that it was voters flipping
parties on those two lines of the ballot.
Overall, the presidential and the state chief
justice races produced about the same number of votes, a little more
than 2 million in each. But Romney won 204,000 more votes out of Alabama
than Moore did in 2012.
That suggests there were about 200,000 of
Alabamians voting for establishmentarian Republican Mitt Romney, who did
not pull the lever for populist Roy Moore. Instead, many voted for the
Democrat challenging Moore, Bob Vance. (Vance got about 180,000 more
votes in Alabama than Barack Obama in 2012.)
And remember all those Republican defections
from Moore happened back in 2012, long before the candidate found
himself facing a growing set of allegations of sexual misconduct with
teenage girls.
None of that necessarily indicates that Moore is headed for a loss in December.
Serving as a U.S. Senator in Washington is
different than serving as the Chief Justice of Alabama’s Supreme Court
in Montgomery. Voters may want different things out of those elected
officials. The 2012 vote came in a presidential election year and
presidential electorates tend to look different than others. And the
political environment in the era of Donald Trump is hard to get a read
on; the standard norms have often not held.
But the 2012 numbers show that Alabama
Republicans are not an easily-defined monolith that march in lock-step
behind a GOP nominee. Long before any of the recent allegations Moore
was a divisive figure, even among Republicans in the state. December 12
may tell us how divided they are on the man.
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