Crossposted at MyDD and DailyKOS
We are in the fourth year of an unprecedented change in political registration. Never before has there been as sustained a pattern of decrease in one party's registration and increase in the other's. Jennifer Steinhauer today in the New York Times discusses this significant trend.
For more than three years starting in 2005, there has been a reduction in the number of voters who register with the Republican Party and a rise among voters who affiliate with Democrats and, almost as often, with no party at all.
"Obviously, these are not good numbers for the party to be looking at. Democrats have always had extremely broad multifaceted registration programs."
... Democrats are also benefiting from demographic changes, including the rise in the number of younger voters and the urbanization of suburbs, which has resulted in a different political flavor there, voting and campaign experts said. The party has also been helped by a willingness to run more pragmatic candidates, who have helped make the party more appealing to a broader swath of the electorate.
Among the 26 states with registration data, the percentage of those who have signed on with Democrats has risen in 15 states since 2004, and the percentage for Republicans has risen in six, according to state data. The number of registered Democrats fell in 11 states, compared with 20 states where Republican registration numbers fell. In the 26 states and the District of Columbia where registration data were available, the total number of registered Democrats increased by 214,656, while the number of Republicans fell by 1,407,971.