Analyzing the 2010 Midterm Elections – the South Carolina Gubernatorial Election, Part 3

This is part of three posts analyzing the 2010 South Carolina gubernatorial election, in which Republican Nikki Haley won a closer-than-expected victory over Democrat Vincent Sheheen. The main focus of these posts will be to explore whether a racial effect accounted for Ms. Haley’s unexpected poor performance.

(Note: This is also part of a series of posts analyzing the 2010 midterm elections.)

The previous post mapped out the relationship between Democratic shifts in 2010 and white registration numbers. Here is the relevant map reposted:

The post ended by noting that “So far this analysis has been relatively light on the statistical side of things.” It included a number of maps, but did not use any raw numbers.

This post aims to draw conclusions based on those numbers.

Let’s begin by translating the picture above into a graph:

This graph maps the relationship between how white a county in South Carolina is, and how much it shifted against non-white Republican candidate Nikki Haley in 2010.

If normally-Republican whites moved against Ms. Haley due to her race, one would expect the dots to be graphed in a roughly 45-degree diagonal line; the whiter a county, the more Democratic it would shift in 2010.

Clearly this is not the case in the graph above. There are a lot of very white counties that shifted strongly against Ms. Haley – but there are also a lot of very white counties that supported her more than they did Senator John McCain.

Indeed, the whitest counties seem to spread out into two groups; one group moves strongly against Ms. Haley, another actually shifts for her. One might speculate that the former group is composed of lower-income, rural whites and the latter is composed of higher-income, metropolitan whites.

To test this theory, the previous post adjusted for income by eliminating all the counties with a median household income greater than the state median (i.e. it got rid of the rich whites). Here is what the result looked like:

There seems to be a correlation here, as the previous post noted.

Here is how the relationship looks on a graph:

The group of white counties which shifted towards Ms. Haley has disappeared. Instead, one sees a much stronger trend: the whiter the county, the more strongly it moved against non-white Republican Governor Nikki Haley.

This only happens once high-income white counties are tossed out of the analysis. High-income Republican whites were very comfortable voting for non-white Republicans; low income Republican whites were less willing.

Interestingly, this pattern is not unique to South Carolina. In Louisiana, Republican Governor Bobby Jindal – a non-white individual of Indian descent – did extremely poorly amongst rural, low-income (Republican) whites while winning landslide support amongst high-income, suburban (Republican) whites. This caused Mr. Jindal to lose in his first attempt to run for governor.

Finally, one can test whether the effect above is statistically significant, or just the result of randomness.

Here is a regression analysis run on the 2010 South Carolina gubernatorial race:

Regression analysis is something I am still not fully comfortable with, so bear this in mind as the analysis continues.

The regression attempted to use two variables – race and income – to predict whether voters would vote more Democratic in 2010. Specifically, it used the percent of white registered voters in a county and said county’s median household income.

The model states that every 10% increase in white registered voters results in a 3.65% greater Democratic shift against Ms. Haley (this is the Coefficient column at the bottom left).

More importantly, whiteness and income were statistically significant when placed together; there was a 0.1% chance that the effect of whiteness was random, and a 0.4% chance that the effect of income was random (this is the P>|t| column at the bottom center).

So the evidence is fairly strong that racially-based voting by low-income whites hurt non-white Republican Ms. Haley in 2010.

There is, however, a caveat. The above regression only explains 20% of the variance between the different degrees of Democratic shifts between different counties (this is the Adj R-Squared line at the top right). This means that 80% of the variance is not explained by race and income.

Racism probably hurt Ms. Haley in 2010, but it was far from the only factor.

P.S. Here is the relevant data used to built this analysis:

County % Change Democratic % White Registered Median Household Income
Abbeville 21.31% 69.08% 33,995
Aiken -1.30% 75.02% 43,845
Allendale 1.65% 25.09% 23,942
Anderson 15.75% 83.40% 41,399
Bamberg -1.54% 37.56% 28,266
Barnwell 0.40% 55.31% 30,549
Beaufort -8.27% 79.47% 54,085
Berkeley -1.32% 68.74% 49,609
Calhoun 4.72% 54.90% 39,537
Charleston -5.41% 69.36% 46,145
Cherokee 14.40% 77.45% 35,807
Chester 4.69% 59.40% 33,640
Chesterfield 15.82% 64.00% 32,267
Clarendon 2.28% 48.66% 29,840
Colleton 1.83% 58.16% 35,935
Darlington 6.87% 56.31% 34,577
Dillon 7.62% 49.11% 28,653
Dorchester -2.37% 72.07% 52,443
Edgefield 0.86% 62.79% 38,885
Fairfield 4.28% 42.02% 32,694
Florence 6.49% 58.12% 39,919
Georgetown -2.40% 66.73% 40,573
Greenville 4.41% 78.49% 45,917
Greenwood 12.18% 68.35% 39,586
Hampton 3.50% 42.67% 32,253
Horry -5.72% 85.98% 41,163
Jasper -4.05% 47.30% 35,163
Kershaw 33.41% 72.24% 45,268
Lancaster 9.10% 75.12% 40,286
Laurens 10.15% 71.81% 36,910
Lee 7.02% 37.11% 28,041
Lexington 15.99% 84.74% 52,062
Marion 5.55% 41.82% 28,437
Marlboro 9.87% 44.75% 26,799
McCormick -7.63% 57.41% 35,557
Newberry 13.21% 69.01% 37,263
Oconee 17.25% 91.39% 39,840
Orangeburg 2.19% 34.54% 33,567
Pickens 15.13% 91.76% 40,357
Richland 7.18% 49.90% 45,643
Saluda 15.99% 70.11% 40,819
Spartanburg 7.39% 76.07% 40,278
Sumter -0.65% 48.08% 37,113
Union 21.54% 67.31% 32,361
Williamsburg 1.43% 31.59% 26,639
York -5.13% 78.89% 50,644
Total 4.52% 69.66% 42,580
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5 Responses to Analyzing the 2010 Midterm Elections – the South Carolina Gubernatorial Election, Part 3

  1. Anonymous says:

    You can’t really make a serious attempt to analyze this election without comparing the minority turnout with previous elections. Additionally you need to chart historical Dem shifts from presidential years to off years rather than from only 2008-10. There is always a small shift to Dems in state races.

  2. Sophie says:

    I don’t really feel that it’s fair though to compare 2008 numbers to 2010, given that low-income rural white voters in the South have always been far willing to vote for Democratic statewide candidates than presidential ones (especially for President Obama.) And additionally, turnout patterns in 2010 vs 2008 were likely considerably different. There is also the consideration that Democratic numbers simply have more room to improve in the rural white counties.

    A better approach would be to compare the governor’s race vote in 2010 to the other statewide races. Both the Lt. Governors race and the Attorney Generals race were relatively close (6-10 point margins, counting Green for Democrat.), which Vincent Shaheen outperformed somewhat. In those races, both candidates were white, so if you compared state-wide #s, it would be a far fairer contest, in my opinion.

    • inoljt says:

      That’s an interesting critique, and you probably have a pretty good point there.

      To be honest, when I did this analysis the first thing that came to mind was the 2008 presidential election, and so I started from there. You may be right about using another election.

      I’m actually thinking about doing the same analysis for Bobby Jindal in Louisiana; would you recommend using the 2004 presidential election as a model to compare, or the 2008 presidential election, or another election?

      • Sophie says:

        I would definitely vote against using the 2008 election. Remember 2008 was an exceptional year for African-American turnout, so Democrats in other years would certainly do much worse in heavily African-American counties – simply because the African-Americans aren’t turning out at the same rate. 2004 might be better, but again, it’s been a fact that Democrats tend to do better in off-year elections and runoffs in the South simply because there aren’t coattails and presidential turnout (witness for instance the cursed NC senate seat that changed hands every 6 years until Burr finally held it in 2010. And I remember that in LA especially, Democrats were favored to hold the seat IF it went to a runoff – since then there wouldn’t be presidential turnout, plus it would be a weekend for all the working class whites to turn out for Chris John.)

        So again, for LA, I would recommend looking at downticket races. Via google, there was also an insurance commisioner’s race where the Dem won by 15 points. Compare those two.

      • inoljt says:

        Interesting advice, and I will certainly take that into account.

        One problem might be that using a statewide election would make comparing Bobby Jindal’s race with Nikki Haley’s impossible (which was something I was thinking of doing). Using a single election (2008) as a way to compare the relative resistance against these candidates would be very useful – I have a theory that resistance against Jindal was much stronger than resistance against Haley, and that wouldn’t be provable if I used two different elections.

        Anyways, thanks for the advice, and I will certainly ponder it for a while.

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