Estimated votes by county among non-blacks

Ben Lauderdale writes:

I [Ben] had this map [see below] on my door for the last week. Based on exactly the same calculation using constant 95% black support and census-proportional representation. The white counties are the ones whose census names didn’t match properly with the names used in the library(maps) package in R, I was too lazy to fix them.

ben1.png

Cool. I’d only suggest using light gray rather than heavy black lines between counties; the map as it is overemphasizes the county borders, I think. But I respect his laziness; there’s always time later to fix the details.

Ben continues:

[Below are] the state-by-state county share plots for the lower 49, Obama vote share as a function of black population share. V.O. Key’s observation that whites who live near blacks in southern states are less positively inclined towards them is *still* visible in several states.

ben2.png

The circle areas are proportional to county voter turnout. (The biggest circle is L.A. county in California, and so forth.)

Ben also had this comment about his map:

It reminded me of something Bob Putnam would say every time someone presented an empirical talk in our Center for the Study of Democratic Politics series during the year he was a fellow here at Princeton: “You should include miles to the Canadian border as a variable in your regression, it is the most important proxy for political culture in America!” At least in the eastern half of the country, he has a point.

Except for New Hampshire and Vermont, I think.

P.S. For graphics enthusiasts, here are some earlier graphs that I gave the thumbs-down on before Ben came up with the 50 plots above:First version:

ben2a.png

Second version:

ben3.png

Ben was skeptical about proportional circle sizes, but I think it turned out pretty well.

I’d also recommend non-alphabetical ordering of the states and moving away from the misleadingly square 7×7 grid, but I didn’t want to hassle Ben any more.

4 thoughts on “Estimated votes by county among non-blacks

  1. Pretty.

    I might leave off the west entirely from this map/analysis. Whereas in the east, not-black is a decent proxy for white in most counties, in the west this really isn't true.

  2. I know this is sort-of off topic, but I was hoping to get some help with simply mapping data in R. Even the script that goes thru the commands would be a bigger help.

    Thanks for the Blog!

    – Brock

  3. "It reminded me of something Bob Putnam would say every time someone presented an empirical talk in our Center for the Study of Democratic Politics series during the year he was a fellow here at Princeton: "You should include miles to the Canadian border as a variable in your regression, it is the most important proxy for political culture in America!" At least in the eastern half of the country, he has a point."

    Yes, Daniel Patrick Moynihan used to talk about that all the time: the closer a state is to the Canadian border, the lower the illegitimacy rate, the lower the crime rate, the lower the high school dropout rate, and so forth.

    Of course, Moynihan was just joking, but I'm wondering what fraction of statistically sophisticated people in 2008 can even get Moynihan's joke anymore before their CRIMETHINK alarms go off in their heads?

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