By Jerusalem Demsas
Thursday, November 14, 2024
As California goes, so goes the nation, but what happens
when a lot of Californians move to Texas? After the 2030 census, the home of
Hollywood and Silicon Valley will likely be forced to reckon with its
stagnating population and receding influence. When congressional seats are
reallocated to adjust for population changes, California is almost certain to
be the biggest loser—and to be seen as the embodiment of the Democratic Party’s
failures in state and local governance.
The liberal
Brennan Center is projecting a loss of four seats, and the conservative
American Redistricting Project, a loss of five. Either scenario could
affect future presidential races, because a state’s Electoral College votes are
determined by how many senators and representatives it has. In 2016, after her
loss to Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton argued that she’d “won the places that
are optimistic, diverse, dynamic, moving forward”—an outlook that she
contrasted with Donald Trump’s “Make America Great Again” slogan. But now
Democrats’ self-conception as a party that represents the future is running
headlong into the reality that the fastest-growing states are Republican-led.
According to the American Redistricting Project, New York
will lose three seats and Illinois will lose two, while Republican-dominated
Texas and Florida will gain four additional representatives each if
current trends continue. Other growing states that Trump carried in this
month’s election could potentially receive an additional representative. By
either projection, if the 2032 Democratic nominee carries the same states that
Kamala Harris won this year, the party would receive 12 fewer electoral votes.
Among the seven swing states that the party lost this year, Harris came
closest to winning in the former “Blue Wall” of Wisconsin, Michigan, and
Pennsylvania—at least two of which are likely to lose an electoral vote after
2030. Even adding those states to the ones Harris won would not be enough to
secure victory in 2032. The Democrat would need to find an additional 14 votes
somewhere else on the map.
Population growth and decline do not simply happen
to states; they are the result of policy choices and economic conditions
relative to other states. Some states lose residents because their economy
hasn’t kept up with the rest of the country’s. But in much of blue America,
including California and New York, economic dynamism and high wages aren’t
enough to sustain population growth, because the skyrocketing cost of shelter
eclipses everything else. The amenities that these states offer—the California
coastline, the New York City cultural scene—start to look like the historic
molding on a house with its roof caved in. Policy failures are dragging down
the Democrats’ prospects in two ways: by showing the results of Democratic
governance in sharp, unflattering relief, and by directly reducing the party’s
prospects in presidential elections and the House of Representatives.
California, New York, and other slow-growing coastal
Democratic strongholds have taken an explicitly anti-population-growth
tack for decades. They took for granted their natural advantages and assumed
that prosperity was a given. People willingly giving up their residencies in
these coastal areas is a sign of how dismal the cost of living is.
While the media are likely to pick up on anecdotes about
wealthy people complaining about tax levels and political norms in liberal
states, data show that population loss is heavily
concentrated among lower-income people and people
without a college degree. In an analysis of census data, the Public
Policy Institute of California found that more than 600,000 people who have
left the Golden State in the past decade have cited the housing crisis as the primary
reason.
When people vote with their feet, they’re sending a clear
signal about which places make them optimistic about the future. What does it
say about liberal governance that Democratic states cannot compete with Florida
and Texas?
Remarkably, none of this happened by accident. A
hostility toward population growth and people in general has suffused the
politics of Democratic local governance. The researcher Greg Morrow
meticulously documented
the political effort in Los Angeles to stop people from moving to the city over
the back half of the 20th century. In the early 1970s, the UCLA professor Fred
Abraham pushed for growth limits, arguing, “We need fewer people here—a quality
of life, not a quantity of life. We must request a moratorium on growth and
recognize that growth should be stopped.” Morrow also points to comments from
the Sierra Club, which recommended “limiting residential housing … to lower
birth rates.” Such arguments preceded a now infamous downzoning in the ’70s and
’80s, which substantially reduced the number of homes that could be legally
built, slashed
the potential population capacity of Los Angeles from an estimated 10 million
people to 4 million, and spurred one of the nation’s most acute housing and
homelessness crises. Self-styled progressives and liberals in blue communities
across the country have taken similar approaches, all but directing would-be
newcomers to places like Texas and Florida.
Contrast this attitude with Florida Governor Ron
DeSantis’s boast, in a press release during his unsuccessful
presidential-primary campaign, that “people are flocking to Florida and fleeing
California.” DeSantis has pursued pro-growth housing policies that allow
working-class people to afford housing in his state.
For a long time, failures of local governance have
remained divorced from the national political conversation. What can President
Joe Biden have to do with the decision of Marin or Westchester County to refuse
new housing supply? But national Democrats cannot overlook the issue any
longer. As researchers from the Economic Innovation Group recently
noted, the biggest declines in Democrats’ vote share from 2020 to 2024
occurred in the most expensive and most populous counties.
In the days since Harris’s defeat, Democrats have
defended Biden’s tenure by arguing that inflation was beyond the president’s
control, or pointing to other economic accomplishments. But no Republican
stopped San Francisco from building housing, and Trump is not responsible for
New York City’s byzantine housing-permitting regime. (In fact, as I write this,
New York is on
the verge of watering down a proposal that would ease
the construction of apartment buildings and smaller homes.) In the course
of my work, I hear many policy makers and residents in blue communities lament
their intractable housing crises, seemingly unaware that many places have
solved a supposedly insurmountable problem. The only difference is those places
are in states run by Republicans.
It is not too late to reverse California’s stagnation—or
that of New York and other expensive states. The cost of housing is quite
literally a signal for how many millions of people would love to live in those
places. Yet, in the aftermath of Trump’s reelection, as several
Democratic governors have telegraphed their intent to act as bastions of
resistance in the coming years, none has focused on the issue that has most
hollowed out the promise of liberal America. Nowhere in these headline-seeking
pronouncements is a plan to address the housing and cost-of-living crisis or even
a reckoning with the failures that produced the status quo. In part this is due
to Democrats’ failure to understand the link between their anti-growth policies
at the state and local level and the national viability of their party. For
years, Democrats have gotten to represent the growing, vibrant parts of this
country and have become complacent, presuming economic dominance even in the
absence of good policy. But last week’s results should not have shocked state
and local Democratic policy makers—people have been voting with their feet for
years.
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