House Minority Leader
Brian Newberry had some simple wisdom when the Providence Journal asked him why Democrats do
better than Republicans in
Rhode Island.
“The answer to that is
easy: there’s a lot more Democrats than Republicans,” he was quoted as saying.
Of course this is
true. The Journal then went on to surmise that this is because “Rhode
Island is often called the bluest of blue states, and numbers from the secretary
of state’s office bear that out.”
This, on the other
hand, is not true … nor is there any way for Rhode Island voting rolls to bear
out a comparison with the rest of the country. Nevertheless, the ProJo goes on
to cite the data: “As of Jan. 24, the state had 295,971 registered Democrats
and 74,959 registered Republicans. Also in the mix: 1,311 voters aligned with
the Moderate Party, and a whopping 358,637 who were undeclared.”
Where Rhode Island is
almost unmatched, on the other hand, is in the low number of Republicans and
those leaning that way. Only Hawaii has fewer Republicans than Rhode Island,
according to Gallup. Hawaii has 25.4 percent Republicans/lean rights and RI has
27.5 percent.
In other words, it’s
not that Rhode Island isn’t the bluest of the blue states, it’s that we are the
second least red state. Said yet another way, when compared to other states
we’re more anti-Republican than we are pro-Democrat.
No state north of the
old Mason Dixon line has higher percentage of Republicans living there than the
national average, which is 40%. Conservative ideology just isn’t all that
popular around here anymore. We can and should debate why – and I’m more than happy
to participate in that debate! – but we should not pretend that Democrats
dominate here like no where else in the nation.
In fact, the Gallup
data indicates 24.7 percent of Rhode Islanders identify themselves as liberals.
That’s almost as many as define themselves as either Republican or leaning that
way. This shouldn’t surprise those who follow State House politics closely as
there are far more progressive Democrats than any kind of Republican in either
chamber.
Bob Plain is the editor/publisher of Rhode Island's Future. Previously, he's
worked as a reporter for several different news organizations both in Rhode
Island and across the country.