• jordanlund@lemmy.worldM
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    7 months ago

    Yup. Digging the county by county stuff too.

    Here’s my state for 2020:

    You see those three GIANT counties in SE Oregon?

    Left to right that’s Lake, Harney and Malheur county.

    Ruby Red. Here’s how they voted in 2020:

    Lake - Biden - 792 - 18.15% Trump - 3,470 - 79.53%

    Harney - Biden - 894 - 19.95% Trump - 3,475 - 77.55%

    Malheur - Biden - 3,260 - 27.62% Trump - 8,187 - 69.36%

    Sorry guys, square miles and cattle don’t get a vote.

    You see that tiny little sliver of a blue county next to the panhandle? That’s Multnomah county. I.E. “Portland” or “where the people live”.

    Multnomah - Biden - 367,249 - 79.21% Trump - 82,995 - 17.90%

    • OpenStars@startrek.website
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      7 months ago

      I remember looking up Iowa’s county results right after a past election, and Florida too, and thinking: it is very easy to see the university towns. One or two oddities I had to look up… it turns out they were small universities. The correlation between education and liberalism is extreme. Austin vs. Texas at large would be another example.

      • OneStepAhead@lemmynsfw.com
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        7 months ago

        Whereas I do believe that it’s not just “education” but moreso intelligence that is the predictor of liberalism today, the “where the people are” as well as the age bracket make a big difference. Most small colleges are in small towns, but these colleges have a commanding presence in the population of the area. They can be gerrymandered into oblivion tho.