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Opinion: One-minute book: Earl and Merle make your head swirl

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Looking for a book full of insights about the next general election, but don’t have time to do the booksore browse? Here’s a highly abbreviated tour of Divided America: The ferocious power struggle in American politics, by Earl Black and Merle Black:

Page 1:

America’s tight national battle results from opposing political developments in five different regions.

Page 4:

As late as 1976, the Democratic Party included almost as many white conservatives (19 percent) as white liberals (22 percent).

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Page 9:

White Americans have a plurality—rather than a majority—party.

Page 16:

If the Republicans continued to lose moderate whites by large margins, and if they lost liberal whites and racial/ethnic minorities by even wider margins, even the most solid bloc of white conservatives could not possibly overcome Democrats’ strength in the rest of the electorate.

Page 25:

The most Democratic groups are African Americans, non-Christian whites, and New Minorities.

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Page 36:

Blatant obstacles to blacks’ voting, low turnout rates among whites, and the absence of real two-party competition made the South the most undemocratic area of the United States.

Page 49:

Large majorities of white voters in the two Republican strongholds, however, believed that the war had improved the nation’s long-term security interests.

Page 64:

Republicanism has become the party of respectability and influence for college-educated white Protestants in the South and the Mountains/Plains.

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Page 81:

A prominent Baptist who openly practiced his faith, Carter was nonetheless rejected by his fellow white Protestants, 58 percent to 42 percent.

Page 100:

Republican victories in the rural areas and suburbs, combined with greater-than-usual strength in the large cities, gave the Grand Old Party success throughout the Northeast.

Page 121:

The liberal wing of the Democratic party is 64 percent, fifteen times the size of its white conservatives and considerably larger than its white moderates.

Page 169:

The establishment of exceptionally strong Democratic bases in the Northeast and Pacific Coast is a momentous development in presidential politics.

Page 196:

After the 2004 elections, Democrats outnumbered Republicans in seven of the Northeast’s eleven state delegations.

Page 225:

The Senate party battle in the Midwest, unlike the trends in the Northeast and Pacific Coast, reflects transient partisan advantage rather than the emergence of a stable Democratic superiority.

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Page 256:

An overwhelmingly white party remains an overwhelmingly white party.

Last sentence:

Under such conditions, governing the United States will remain an extraordinarily difficult challenge.

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