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Politics of Oregon

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Like many other U.S. states, the politics of Oregon is centered mostly around regional concerns.[citation needed] Oregon leans Democratic as a state, with both U.S Senators from the Democratic party, as well as four out of Oregon's five U.S. Representatives.[1] The state has voted Democrat, by relatively small margins, since 1988 in Presidential elections but also is showing a Libertarian streak in recent years.[2]

The state is broken up into two main geographically separate political areas: the Portland metropolitan area and Eugene, liberal centers of the state, and the rest of the state, whose voters are moving from conservative to libertarian vs democrat. While roughly three fifths (~57%) of the population of Oregon (Total population 3.8 Million plus) lives in the Portland area,[3] the state has a rural population with generally conservative views on gay marriage and state taxes. On most other issues however, the state leans considerably left, including public health care, medical marijuana, euthanasia[4] and environmental protections.

History

For the first half of the 20th century, Oregon was the most consistently Republican west coast state.[5] In 1954, the upset of incumbent Republican Senator Guy Cordon by Democrat Richard L. Neuberger, along with Democratic wins in the U.S. House and statewide races and pickups of 14 and two seats in the state House and Senate, respectively, signaled a strong shift towards the Democratic Party.[5]

Key issues

Key issues in Oregon include:[citation needed]

Population's political ideology

Presidential elections results[6]
Year Republican Democratic
2008 40.40% 738,475 56.75% 1,037,291
2004 47.19% 866,831 51.35% 943,163
2000 46.46% 713,577 47.01% 720,342
1996 39.06% 538,152 47.15% 649,641
1992 32.53% 475,757 42.48% 621,314
1988 46.61% 560,126 51.28% 616,206
1984 55.91% 685,700 43.74% 536,479
1980 48.33% 571,044 38.67% 456,890
1976 47.78% 492,120 47.62% 490,407
1972 52.45% 486,686 42.33% 392,760
1968 49.83% 408,433 43.78% 358,866
1964 35.96% 282,779 63.72% 501,017
1960 52.56% 408,060 47.32% 367,402
1956 55.25% 406,393 44.75% 329,204
1952 60.54% 420,815 38.93% 270,579

Similar to the West Coast states of California and Washington, Oregon has a high percentage of people who identify as liberals. A 2010 Gallup poll that surveyed the political ideology of residents in every state found that people in Oregon identified as:[7]

Another study on the state's resident's political ideology noted that the state's conservatives were the most conservative of any state (more so than Utah or Tennessee) and that the state's liberals were more liberal than any state (more so than Vermont or D.C.).[8]

Political parties

As of July 1st, 2012, there were 2,056,197 registered voters in Oregon and their political party affiliations were:[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ [1] George Washington University
  2. ^ [2] President Elect: The Unofficial Webpage of the Electoral College
  3. ^ 2005 Oregon Population Report Portland State University
  4. ^ Oregon Death with Dignity Act
  5. ^ a b Swarthout, John M. (December 1954). "The 1954 Election in Oregon". The Western Political Quarterly. 7 (4). The Western Political Quarterly: 620–625. doi:10.2307/442815. JSTOR 442815.
  6. ^ http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/ Retrieved 2010-10-12
  7. ^ Jones, Jeffrey M. (2010-02-03). "Ideology: Three Deep South States Are the Most Conservative". Gallup. Retrieved 2010-07-18.
  8. ^ Nate Silver (2008-05-17). "Oregon: Swing State or latte-drinking, Prius-driving lesbian commune?". FiveThirtyEight.com. Retrieved 2010-02-24.
  9. ^ Elections Division (2012-08-06). "Voter Registration By County - July 2012" (PDF). Oregon Secretary of State. Retrieved 2012-08-06.