MAPS OF OUR MINDS: On the latest YouGov poll...

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17, 2026

...Dems are just two points ahead: On June 29, 1982, new language entered the world. 

Some of this language was perhaps a bit murky. Language may have "gone on holiday," As language will sometimes do.  

Briefly, a laborious review:

The new language to which we refer included subsection (b), an addition to Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. At the risk of losing customers"Where I come from, we only talk so long"we present that new language again:

SECTION 2 OF THE VOTING RIGHTS ACT

42 U.S.C. § 1973. Denial or abridgement of right to vote on account of race or color through voting qualifications or prerequisites; establishment of violation.

a) No voting qualification or prerequisite to voting or standard, practice, or procedure shall be imposed or applied by any State or political subdivision in a manner which results in a denial or abridgement of the right of any citizen of the United States to vote on account of race or color, or in contravention of the guarantees set forth in section 1973b

(f)(2) of this title, as provided in subsection (b) of this section.

(b) A violation of subsection (a) of this section is established if, based on the totality of circumstances, it is shown that the political processes leading to nomination or election in the State or political subdivision are not equally open to participation by members of a class of citizens protected by subsection (a) of this section in that its members have less opportunity than other members of the electorate to participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice. The extent to which members of a protected class have been elected to office in the State or political subdivision is one circumstance which may be considered: Provided, That nothing in this section establishes a right to have members of a protected class elected in numbers equal to their proportion in the population.

Part (b) was the new language. Some of that language is still a bit murky, even today, though that fact may be hard for us the people to spot.

Some of that language was a bit murky. That said, the House passed this addition to the VRA by a 389–24 margin. The Senate passed it by an 85–8 vote.  For a fuller account, click here.

There is no doubt that subsection (b) changed the face of congressional politics. In the redistricting which followed the 1990 census, this new provision led to the creation of majority Black districts in various Southern states. This added to the number of Black members of the House of Representatives.  

That said:   

Back on May 10, the New York Times' Carl Hulse answered a fairly obvious question about the creation of those new districts. That question would be this:   

Why did the GOP support the creation of those new districts? 

Given voting patterns of the day, these new districts sent Democratic members to the House, as everyone knew they would. So why did the GOP support the creation of those majority Black / majority Democrat districts? 

Why did the GOP do that? As we noted in Friday's report, here's the way Hulse explained it:

CONGRESSIONAL MEMO 
How Minority Districts Fueled the G.O.P.’s Southern Ascendancy in Congress 

[...]  

In the late 1980s, Republicans had been deep in the House minority for nearly 40 years. But growing dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party had begun moving white Southern conservatives into the Republican ranks, as illustrated by high-profile party switches in Washington. Then the redistricting initiated under a series of court decisions aimed at fostering more minority representation provided yet another opening that might have seemed counterintuitive at first glance.

Architects of the [new congressional] maps realized that if they could maximize Black and Hispanic representation in the new districts, they would simultaneously dilute Democratic strength in surrounding jurisdictions where coalitions of white and Black voters had elected white Democrats for decades. The shift would ultimately create dozens of openings for Republican candidates in what had formerly been known as Democrats’ “Solid South.”   

As far as we know, this is fairly standard history. In the Southern states which were fitfully switching toward Republican control at that time, creation of the majority Black districts helped Republicans pick up seats in neighboring congressional districts. 

Today, Hulse further says, the transition among white Southerners from D to R is complete. For that reason, Hulse says, the GOP is now moving to eliminate the (frequently gerrymandered) majority Black districts in various Southern states, believing that the party could now win every House seat in those Southern states.   

As far as we know, Hulse's history is fairly standard. If memory serves, the partisan tradeoffs in question were openly discussed in real time, with North Carolina's crazily shaped District 12 serving as the poster child for such discussions. 

District 12 was in the news! The leading authority on the district describes it as it existed at that time:  

North Carolina's 12th congressional district

[...]

The district was re-established after the 1990 United States census, when North Carolina gained a House seat due to an increase in population. It was drawn in 1992 as one of two minority-majority districts [in North Carolina], designed to give African-American voters (who comprised 22% of the state's population at the time) the chance to elect a representative of their choice; Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act prohibited the dilution of voting power of minorities by distributing them among districts so that they could never elect candidates of their choice.

In its original configuration, the district had a 64 percent African-American majority in population. The district boundaries, stretching from Gastonia to Durham, were so narrow at some points that it was no wider than a highway lane. It followed Interstate 85 almost exactly. One state legislator famously remarked, after seeing the district map, "If you drove down the interstate with both car doors open, you'd kill most of the people in the district."  

The nutty shape of this new district made it a press corps favorite. Starting in November 1992, Rep. Mel Watt was elected eleven times from this district, which was heavily majority Black, and heavily Democratic.

Rep. Watt repeatedly won by very large margins in a district which had been designed to pull Democratic voters out of its several neighboring districts. The district starred in several court cases as the judiciary struggled to find the proper way to interpret and apply subsection (b) of the Voting Rights Act.

At any rate, the transition of the white South from solidly D to solidly R has helped create the modern world in which the GOP holds a slender majority in the House. The last-minute elimination of majority Black districts in certain Southern states may help the GOP retain that control this November.

Can Democrats regain the House this fall? Yes, they certainly can! That said, the analysts groaned yesterday at the numbers presented in this report by Mediaite:

SHOCK POLL: GOP Closing the Gap With Democrats in Latest Midterm Poll   

A new survey from The Economist and YouGov indicates that Republicans are closing the gap with Democrats ahead of this November’s midterm elections.

History would suggest that the latter boasts a considerable advantage over the former as...incumbent parties tend to struggle in the midterms. Previous incarnations of the Economist/YouGov poll backed up that theory. 

One survey from February found that Democrats boasted a seven-point lead over Republicans on the “generic ballot” question, “If the elections for U.S. Congress were being held today, who would you vote for in the district where you live?” Another from May suggested that Democrats’ lead had slipped to five points.

But in this latest poll of 1,549 American adults (1,402 of which were registered voters conducted between June 13 and 15, Republicans trailed Democrats by just three points (39%-36%) among the former, larger group and two points (46%-44%) among the latter, smaller one.   

Let's restate that final paragraph in English:  

On this Economist/YouGov poll, Democrats are holding only a two-point lead among registered voters on this version of the "generic ballot" question: 

If the elections for U.S. Congress were being held today, who would you vote for in the district where you live?

The Democratic Party's lead on that question is down to just two points! Given the madness of Republican governance, how is that even possible?

Yes, it's only one poll. There's no reason to assume that this particular survey's results are perfectly accurate.   

It's also true that there's no way to know what will happen between now and November. But especially given the way the mid-census redistricting wars seem to be shaking out, there is currently zero guarantee that the Democrats will regain the House this fall.

The Republican president continues to engage in highly erratic conduct. The Republican Congress has continued to support his erratic conduct pretty much right down the line.

Admittedly, the price of eggs is downbut the price of gas has been way up! Given those facts, why isn't the Democratic Party seeming to stage a "blue wave" runaway on these generic ballot questions?  

What's holding the Democrats back? Tomorrow, we'll return to the insult aimed at Michelle Obama to offer one possible type of answer. 

We'll return to the way that same insult is frequently churned by the folk who perform the corporate messaging for the rancid Fox News Channel. Most strikingly, we'll look at the way this insult was interpreted on yesterday's Deadline: White House. 

Eventually, we'll find our way back to the murky language which emerged in 1982and yes, these questions are related. In the immediate present, though, they lead us onward to this question:

In what ways might we, the Blues, perhaps be defeating ourselves?

Tomorrow: As heard on Deadline: White House


51 comments:

  1. 🔴 Republicans 39%
    🔵 Democrats 34%

    Last poll - Democrats +2

    YouGov #A - A - 6/15

    ReplyDelete
  2. Winning the Iraq war while Democrats showed they wanted America to lose, "pride month" and the cage match have reminded voters why they hate Democrats.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That and getting rid of racist gerrymandering that produced zero Republican representation in states with 45% Republicans.

      Delete
    2. Now answer this: Why do Americans hate republicans so much?

      Delete
    3. “Public approval for the UFC match on the White House grounds was notably low, with a Reuters/Ipsos Survey indicating that only 16% of Americans supported hosting the event.”

      Delete
    4. Folks just are glad we can dump hundreds of billions losing a war and empowering our enemy; plus handing over $300 Billion in sorry we mussed your hair money so we can't have the ACA, Medicaid, SS, education, etc. As long as people think the niggers, the Muslims, the Mexicans are getting it worse, it's all good.

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  3. SHOCK POLL!!!

    “This week's Economist / YouGov Poll finds that 45% of registered voters say they would vote for the Democratic candidate for Congress if the election were held today, while 42% say they would vote for the Republican candidate. This 3-point Democratic lead is among Democrats' smallest advantages on congressional vote intention in months; 4- or 5-point Democratic leads have been more common, and Democrats have occasionally led by 6 or 7 points.”

    Let’s check the date on this SHOCK POLL: march 24, 2026.

    That’s right. Yougov’s polling has always shown a tighter race than other polls. But mediaite chooses to be hyperbolic.

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    Replies
    1. Excellent point.

      Delete
    2. "Yes, it's only one poll. There's no reason to assume that this particular survey's results are perfectly accurate. "

      Yougov predicted Kamala Harris would beat Trump by 3% a week before the Nov 2024 election. There is no evidence giving us any reason to believe Yougov is overpredicting in favor of either party, so this is inaccuracy inherent to their sampling method.

      Somerby uses the odd phrase "perfectly accurate" but there is no reason to believe Yougov is accurate at all, much less perfect. Yougov picked the wrong winner during the last presidential election.

      Delete
  4. Say what you will about the Republican Party, but you can't say they don't look at children sexually.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. When you’re willing to vote for a president that has raped minors, you’re dead inside.

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  5. “growing dissatisfaction with the Democratic Party”

    LBJ predicted the shift, and told us why. But “dissatisfaction” is certainly a sanitized way of describing what was happening.

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    Replies
    1. The NY Times tiptoeing around racism is very on brand.

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  6. “redistricting initiated under a series of court decisions aimed at fostering more minority representation”

    The fact that the courts had weighed in and mandated such districts be drawn seems to have been ignored here.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Somerby has a narrative, facts be damned.

      Delete
  7. “coalitions of white and Black voters had elected white Democrats for decades.”

    The South elected only white democrats post-Reconstruction due to their resentment of northern republicans. It’s implausible to suggest that black voters somehow joined in a “coalition” to elect any of them, given that there was no other choice. Black voters’ strength had been gerrymandered away to prevent them from electing their preferred candidates. The shift of white voters towards the Republican Party began as a result of the civil rights and voting rights acts, and these majority minority districts, far from driving this shift, were merely a temporary slowing of the shift, which was already well underway. And that is the actual history.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Agree.

      But Bob puts his fingers in his ears and sings lalalala.

      Delete
  8. “As far as we know, Hulse's history is fairly standard.”

    “As far as we know” is as far as Somerby wants to investigate and question Hulse.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. And if it’s “fairly” standard, that’s good enough!

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    2. The packing, unholy alliance, and cracking are standard history, it’s the analysis and ensuing narrative that are weak.

      Delete
  9. Somerby, thumb, scale.

    Rinse and repeat.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Commenter, duh, duh.

      Doieee. Duh.

      Delete
    2. Good to know what triggers you, 1:11.

      Delete
  10. Somerby avoids highlighting the pertinent part of the leading authority he cites: “ Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act prohibited the dilution of voting power of minorities by distributing them among districts so that they could never elect candidates of their choice.”

    That is a perfectly plain and clear paraphrasing of the law, nothing murky about it.

    Somerby then feigns confusion to avoid having to admit the obvious: the Republican Party is the party of racists.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Inflation was on the rise before the Iran War, due to Trump’s tariffs and other disastrous policies - Trumpflation is what many people are calling it.

    Trump has intentionally created chaos in order for him and his cronies to get even richer.

    Trump now signaling he’s willing to surrender to Iran will only marginally curtail the increase in prices, if at all.

    As far as oil goes (oil’s well that goes well), Iran has essentially a monopoly on the Strait of Hormuz, and that is mainly what is impacting the current price of that commodity.

    The primary actionable cause of inflation is corporations acquiring enough power to raise prices at will.

    The increasing price of eggs for example was found, in a court case, to be the result of collusion between the two leading producers/distributors of eggs.

    The Biden admin was able to lower the previous Trumpflation (inflation caused by Trump mishandling the Covid pandemic) in large part by aggressively pursuing anti-monopoly policies.

    This anti-monopoly stance continues the spirit of Teddy Roosevelt’s legacy. Lincoln, Roosevelt, Eisenhower - all flawed Republicans but they represent a party that cared about America progressing towards a better place. This is in sharp contrast with the modern version of the Republican Party, dating back to 1981, which uses White and Christian Supremacy in order to push Corporate Supremacy, and has propagated the largest transfer of wealth in history: $50+ TRILLION being redistributed from the bottom 90% to the top 1%.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Why are Democrats less popular than Republicans and Mr. Trump?

      Devoid of ideas other than opposing President Trump’s personality, the Dems will be out of the Whitehouse for at least 11 more years.

      Delete
    2. Republicans are hell bent on destroying our country in order to benefit a handful of wealthy people.

      Yet Somerby keeps whistling his same dumb right wing tune, without a genuine or sincere care in the world.

      Delete
    3. 12:08,
      I've been getting a lot more traction with my Democratic Party Congressional representatives over support for a tax on wealth, breaking-up monopolies, and more oversight of the financial industry.
      Who told you the Dems are devoid of ideas, coastal elites who rig the economy in their favor?

      Delete
    4. It’s “White House” you foreign troll dope.

      Dems are more popular than Republicans where the rubber hits the road; since Trump was re-elected Dems have flipped over 20 seats while Republicans have flipped none.

      Trump is now the least popular president in history, due to his right wing policies and actions.

      To the extent that Dems are unpopular, it is related to their centrist wing that is perceived as weak for capitulating to Republicans too frequently.

      Dems are unpopular for not being progressive enough, but that has been changing since 2018, when Dems started transitioning away from neoliberalism and towards wokeness and concerns for the material needs of Americans.

      Republicans are unpopular for being right wing loons excessively focusing on racism and xenophobia as they pickpocket our country.

      Delete
    5. Tax wealth, not work.

      Delete
    6. 12:00

      You haven't been getting any traction at all with regard to support from the Democratic Party for a tax on wealth, breaking up monopolies and more foresight of the financial industry.

      If someone from the Democratic party told you that was possible, they were lying to you.

      Delete
    7. 12:39

      That’s just fake news you’re pushing, and nobody is buying it.

      All you’re accomplishing is making others aware that you’re triggered and struggling to cope.

      Delete
    8. When Trump was re-elected his white working class support was +30, now his white working class support is -30.

      That’s a remarkable shift, well done, Trump!

      This shift is mirrored across most other categories and demographics, such as with independents and Black and Hispanic males.

      Delete
    9. And what the fuck you pointing fingers at Dems for when Shrub, Dementia 1, and Dementia 2 - have literally bankrupted the country with tax cuts for Richie Rich you weirdo.

      Delete
  12. Not just Americans, the entire world is anxiously and eagerly awaiting to celebrate the most anticipated obituary in history.

    womp womp

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You must be really famous.

      Delete
    2. Good to know what triggers you, 12:58.

      Delete
  13. No-bid contracts - boy, I don't know.

    I thought this guy was a builder?

    ReplyDelete
  14. Top stories people are reading today:

    Chick fil A has been dethroned as America's favorite fast food.

    Jelly Roll, whoever that is, is divorcing his wife.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That's because this is the 39th time Trump has claimed he had a deal - all false claims.

      Delete
    2. He's a TV prop.

      They've already won the framing war. It's a 60-day ceasefire agreement starting Friday (supposedly), not a "deal" ending hostilities.

      Even their detractors have been suckered into believing there's a "deal."

      Delete
  15. Quaker in a BasementJune 17, 2026 at 2:36 PM

    Iran gets access to $300 billion under Trump's "agreement."

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. remember when DiC flipped his lid because Obama released $1.7 billion of Iran's own money? I do.

      Delete
  16. I do not understand why Somerby thinks it is OK to have no minority representatives elected in Southern states with 1/3 or more black population. I also do not understand why Somerby thinks the Republican goal of having all red states (with no Democratic representatives elected) reflects the population's political affiliations and why such lopsided representation is good for our democracy.

    Many spectators of American current events believe that the Republican party has committed suicide by electing and even worse, supporting Trump. If Trump has managed to destroy the Republican Party to the point where all Republicans are unelectable due to the collusion and corruption, would it be OK for the Democrats to sweep elections, including in the South where MAGA had its greatest strength, or should Republicans be required to take their lumps until they can convince voters that they are reformed?

    ReplyDelete
  17. Hillary Clinton accused the Republicans of bribery in her interview yesterday.

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  18. "In what ways might we, the Blues, perhaps be defeating ourselves?"

    If this were really a thing, Somerby would have come up with some evidence himself to support this idea.

    I have yet to see Somerby address the idea that Russia and billionaires have been manipulating social media, PACs and engaging in dirty tricks to support Trump's candidacy. In order to claim that we blues have defeated ourselves, Somerby would need to knock down this alternative explanation that says the Republicans have colluded with foreign interference and illegal infusions of cash (from guys like Musk) to manipulate election outcomes (in 2016, 2020 and 2024).

    Somerby doesn't even provide any examples of how we blues might be sabotaging ourselves any more. He just sticks it out there with the assumption we may believe it, if he repeats it often enough. That isn't discussion -- it is propaganda, but that is what Somerby seems to be paid to spew. In exchange for knocking the Dems, Somerby's handlers allow him to be as racist as he wants.

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  19. "MAPS OF OUR MINDS: On the latest YouGov poll..."

    What does Somerby mean by this? Polls are not mind maps. They show us nothing about how we organize knowledge in our minds, how we mentally represent our environment, how we form categories or relate things to each other, how we think about experience. That's partly because polls supply the questions asked and limit the responses of respondents.

    There are techniques for forming mind maps but Yougov is not using any of them when it conducts election polls. Is this just another case of Somerby throwing around a term without knowing what it means (or caring)?

    Mind mapping is a technique taught to students for note taking. It is also a mathematical technique for visualizing relationships inherent in data stored in memory or consciousness. Somerby may have just grabbed onto the "map" part of the term because districting is performed by drawing districts on geographical maps showing where people live. He doesn't tell us where the "mind" part fits in, unless he is talking about the motives parties have in mind when creating districting maps. If so, he should say so. As it stands, it is just another phrase Somerby has borrowed that makes no sense at all used in the context Somerby is discussing.

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  20. Somerby has never talked about the treatment of the protesters who have challenged ICE. Heather Cox Richardson describes what is happening to those who have stood up against mistreatment of immigrants:

    https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/p/june-16-2026

    A patriot would be asking why the mainstream press never covers this stuff, not worrying about why Gutfeld's humor isn't part of mainstream media news.

    There is something majorly ludicrous about an aging Somerby obsessed with why the NY Times never talks about the bad jokes told by his competitor standup comedians.

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  21. Redistricting efforts have not been as successful as Somerby pretends.

    ReplyDelete