Are you curious about how your neighborhood voted in the 2020 election?

9,972 Views | 93 Replies | Last: 1 yr ago by InfantryAg
Jeeper79
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The Park Cities in Dallas are an island of red in a sea of blue. And then SMU campus is a blue dot on that red island. There are clear demographic delineations based on income level. The richer, the redder. Plano seems to buck that trend.
1939
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ttu_85 said:

Awesome ! My affluent highly educated area west of Georgetown +30 Trump. Kelso loves to pimp this narrative that dems win urban/affluent areas while ignoring the bluest areas in may metros are the ghettos.

Oak cliff/South Dallas carries the day for the rats in Dallas county. And those blue areas in Midland and Ector counties are not affluent. I see the same trend in many metro areas. Sure the old money areas are blue and always have been. After all they didn't make that money, daddy or grand-daddy did. Innovative New money is usually Red. Musk is a prime example.


This is true is San Antonio as well. It may be true in the Liberal NE states but not elsewhere in the country.
EclipseAg
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Scotty Appleton said:

The Orange County & San Diego county map aligns almost perfectly with the heavy Asian/Indian population concentrations. That is exactly what has shifted those counties from Red to Blue/Purple.
This is what happened in Sugar Land/Fort Bend County, too.

It's a perfect example of how legal immigration accomplishes the same electoral goals as illegal immigration.

TRADUCTOR
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Data collection, they has where you live now. Now tell them your 1st pets name.
BMX Bandit
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TRADUCTOR said:

Data collection, they has where you live now. Now tell them your 1st pets name.


They have had where you lived as long as you've registered to vote
BTKAG97
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Buck Turgidson said:

While the result for the A&M campus might be depressing, it only represents a couple thousand votes. We have 70k students. There have to be a lot more than two thousand kids in the dorms - where did their votes get counted?
Back home where they grew up.
YouBet
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FTR, I stand corrected. My zip in Dallas went +16 Trump in 2020.

So, whole lotta closet R's because Dem "in this house we believe" signs and Beto stickers abound in that area.
SpreadsheetAg
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Cypress - Trump +17

My specific zone was +29 for MAGA
TRADUCTOR
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BMX Bandit said:

TRADUCTOR said:

Data collection, they has where you live now. Now tell them your 1st pets name.


They have had where you lived as long as you've registered to vote


Rationalize all you want.
jokershady
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72% for trump in my neighborhood in 2020

Edit: +45 margin
Tom Fox
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Trump +81

I can't imagine living in a liberal area.
TAMU1990
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ts5641 said:

Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
This is personally depressing to me, but more importantly these areas have been solid red for decades. They fact they're purple now does not bode well for future elections.
I know people in those areas who voted for Biden because of Trump's demeanor. More than you think. Bougie Republicans. I'll be curious to see how they go this election cycle. These people have equity in houses, retirement accounts, and other investments. As soon as Democrats come after their money they'll change their tune. Republicans should be running on taxes on unrealized gains forever.
TAMU1990
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128 votes on campus for Biden? I bet most of that is professors. They vote on campus too.
RGLAG85
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Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
Wait, this doesn't compute, I've been assured by the CM's, never Trumpers and the RINO's that educated, middle and upper middle class population doesn't vote for Trump and they'll decide this election. I argued back in 2020 that I work exclusively and extensively with this demographic and they were overwhelmingly Trump supporters and that they were being gaslighted by the left and MSM about Trump hate for something more nefarious. And it happened, but they were, and still are demoralized.

READ THAT LIST CAREFULLY.... BUT, YOU STILL WON'T BELIEVE.
RGLAG85
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TAMU1990 said:

ts5641 said:

Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
This is personally depressing to me, but more importantly these areas have been solid red for decades. They fact they're purple now does not bode well for future elections.
I know people in those areas who voted for Biden because of Trump's demeanor. More than you think. Bougie Republicans. I'll be curious to see how they go this election cycle. These people have equity in houses, retirement accounts, and other investments. As soon as Democrats come after their money they'll change their tune. Republicans should be running on taxes on unrealized gains forever.
Example A....
Garrelli 5000
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1939 said:

ttu_85 said:

Awesome ! My affluent highly educated area west of Georgetown +30 Trump. Kelso loves to pimp this narrative that dems win urban/affluent areas while ignoring the bluest areas in may metros are the ghettos.

Oak cliff/South Dallas carries the day for the rats in Dallas county. And those blue areas in Midland and Ector counties are not affluent. I see the same trend in many metro areas. Sure the old money areas are blue and always have been. After all they didn't make that money, daddy or grand-daddy did. Innovative New money is usually Red. Musk is a prime example.


This is true is San Antonio as well. It may be true in the Liberal NE states but not elsewhere in the country.
Explains my neighborhood in Frisco. It is majority white but a huge south asian population.

50% of their yards are nice and well kept, but 100% of the dog **** yards in the entire neighborhood are south asian. The HOA can fine them all day long but there's no real enforcement mechanism.

MookieBlaylock
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David_Puddy said:

rgleml said:

Thanks. Didn't know I had so many libs living in my neighborhood.


Same…. +16 Biden….woof


amazingly this year when my dogs crap on lawns with a Kumallah sign - i always seem to have run out of bags
TAMU1990
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RGLAG85 said:

TAMU1990 said:

ts5641 said:

Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
This is personally depressing to me, but more importantly these areas have been solid red for decades. They fact they're purple now does not bode well for future elections.
I know people in those areas who voted for Biden because of Trump's demeanor. More than you think. Bougie Republicans. I'll be curious to see how they go this election cycle. These people have equity in houses, retirement accounts, and other investments. As soon as Democrats come after their money they'll change their tune. Republicans should be running on taxes on unrealized gains forever.
Example A....
Like I said, they will change their tune. They had the luxury of being in a red state to "vote with their conscience" in 2020. Self interest always wins out in the end.
TAMU1990
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Garrelli 5000 said:

1939 said:

ttu_85 said:

Awesome ! My affluent highly educated area west of Georgetown +30 Trump. Kelso loves to pimp this narrative that dems win urban/affluent areas while ignoring the bluest areas in may metros are the ghettos.

Oak cliff/South Dallas carries the day for the rats in Dallas county. And those blue areas in Midland and Ector counties are not affluent. I see the same trend in many metro areas. Sure the old money areas are blue and always have been. After all they didn't make that money, daddy or grand-daddy did. Innovative New money is usually Red. Musk is a prime example.


This is true is San Antonio as well. It may be true in the Liberal NE states but not elsewhere in the country.
Explains my neighborhood in Frisco. It is majority white but a huge south asian population.

50% of their yards are nice and well kept, but 100% of the dog **** yards in the entire neighborhood are south asian. The HOA can fine them all day long but there's no real enforcement mechanism.


My highly educated, affluent neighborhood is +40 Trump. Surrounding areas are plus 55+.
kongaggie
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Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
Here is a map of the 2022 governor race. Lower turnout, but pretty much the same trends.
https://www.kxan.com/news/your-local-election-hq/2022-texas-governor-precinct-results/
YouBet
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RGLAG85 said:

TAMU1990 said:

ts5641 said:

Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
This is personally depressing to me, but more importantly these areas have been solid red for decades. They fact they're purple now does not bode well for future elections.
I know people in those areas who voted for Biden because of Trump's demeanor. More than you think. Bougie Republicans. I'll be curious to see how they go this election cycle. These people have equity in houses, retirement accounts, and other investments. As soon as Democrats come after their money they'll change their tune. Republicans should be running on taxes on unrealized gains forever.
Example A....


I have several Republicans friends who were vehemently against Trump in last two elections. They didn't vote for him. These people do exist. TDS is strong.

I have no idea how these same folks plan to vote this time around. Haven't discussed it.
RGLAG85
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YouBet said:

RGLAG85 said:

TAMU1990 said:

ts5641 said:

Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
This is personally depressing to me, but more importantly these areas have been solid red for decades. They fact they're purple now does not bode well for future elections.
I know people in those areas who voted for Biden because of Trump's demeanor. More than you think. Bougie Republicans. I'll be curious to see how they go this election cycle. These people have equity in houses, retirement accounts, and other investments. As soon as Democrats come after their money they'll change their tune. Republicans should be running on taxes on unrealized gains forever.
Example A....


I have several Republicans friends who were vehemently against Trump in last two elections. They didn't vote for him. These people do exist. TDS is strong.

I have no idea how these same folks plan to vote this time around. Haven't discussed it.
And I said at that time, for every one of those, I had 10 that said they hadn't voted for Trump in '16 but we're voting for him in 2020. The election was stolen for anyone not demoralized and paid attention, they just had to make it believable and the mentally weak were psyopsed and still are.
Garrelli 5000
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annie88
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My zip.



Kellso
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Waffledynamics said:

How do they have this information? I thought voting records were private?
This type of information is usually paid for by the high level political consultants on both sides of the aisle.

Urban Counties typically take longer to report their numbers than smaller rural counties that have less polling station.

This is how CNN and Fox News can call states for candidates with only 70-80% of the votes reported. If the votes are even and the last 20% of the vote are in an urban area that might vote 70-90% Democrat they will go ahead and call it for the Dems based on projections of the outstanding counties.

Kellso
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EclipseAg said:

Scotty Appleton said:

The Orange County & San Diego county map aligns almost perfectly with the heavy Asian/Indian population concentrations. That is exactly what has shifted those counties from Red to Blue/Purple.
This is what happened in Sugar Land/Fort Bend County, too.

It's a perfect example of how legal immigration accomplishes the same electoral goals as illegal immigration.


Westlake Hills in Austin is the opposite. Not that diverse at all.
I thought it would be closer to 50/50 rather than 2:1 for Biden.
Daddy-O5
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coolerguy12 said:

+51 Trump. So glad I moved out of the ****hole known as Harris county


My corner of that sh*thole was +67. Take that.
TheWoodlandsTxAg
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"Hillary Clinton will be the first female President in American History."



^Is this you?

Your party's governance on criminal justice, immigration, and fiscal policy has destroyed this country.

You should apologize to Jocelyn Nungaray, Linda Frickey, Rosalie Cook, Nelson Beckett, Jacob Trevino, Daniel Abdelmalak, and countless others.
CanyonAg77
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Wonder why some states have no data?
TheWoodlandsTxAg
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Why do the places with the highest Democrat vote also have the highest overall crime, property crime, and violent crime?

https://crimegrade.org/safest-places-in-houston-tx/

Why do the places with the highest Republican vote also have the lowest overall crime, property crime, and violent crime?

TheWoodlandsTxAg
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ts5641 said:

Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
This is personally depressing to me, but more importantly these areas have been solid red for decades. They fact they're purple now does not bode well for future elections.
2022 Map: https://www.kxan.com/news/your-local-election-hq/2022-texas-governor-precinct-results/

Abbott, Patrick, Paxton and the rest of the statewide ticket in 2022 won back every suburb that was lost in 2018 and 2020.
Kellso
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TheWoodlandsTxAg said:

Why do the places with the highest Democrat vote also have the highest overall crime, property crime, and violent crime?

https://crimegrade.org/safest-places-in-houston-tx/

Why do the places with the highest Republican vote also have the lowest overall crime, property crime, and violent crime?


Why are you obsessed with crime?

There have always been bad people in the world. It does not matter if a Democrat or Republican is in charge....there will always be criminals.

Did your dad ever teach you how to throw them hands?
Did you ever play sports growing up?
Or do you walk around the world terrified of everything?

Are you stupid enough to think that crime will magically go away if Trump wins the election?

If you are female then I apologize for the line of questioning
Kellso
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TheWoodlandsTxAg said:

ts5641 said:

Kellso said:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/upshot/2020-election-map.html

Fascinating tool here by the reviled New York Times. Many people can use this tool if they want to know the political leanings of a suburb or neighborhood.

The 2020 Election wasn't the traditional red vs blue state. It was truly the country and the Exurbs vs the City and the Suburbs.

The City and the Suburbs won in 2020. We will see what happens in 3 weeks.

I'm only going to focus on Texas:

Most Conservative cities in Texas:
Amarillo, Midland, Odessa, Tyler

Dallas-Ft Worth:
Rockwall and North East Tarrant County cities like Keller, Southlake and Colleyville are going to be the areas with the strongest support of Trump.
Trump has lots of support in Roanoke and Flower Mound.
Biden had tons of votes in Denton.

In Dallas County the most heavily republican part of the city are the Park Cities, parts of Lake Highlands and Preston Hollow.

Far North Dallas, Uptown, Kessler Park and Lakewood are the affluent communities in Dallas that tend to lean left.
There is a bright red spot in Oak Cliff that happens to be where Dallas Baptist is located.

Arlington, Irving, Richardson, Lewisville, Carrollton, Garland, and (very surprisingly) Plano, Allen and a lot of Frisco had a ton of people who voted for Joe Biden over Trump.

The amount of blue neighborhoods in Frisco, Little Elm, Allen and Plano was pretty surprising to me.
Coppell is about 50/50 between people that voted for Trump or Biden.

Austin:
Westlake Hills voted 2:1 for Biden over Trump.
Georgetown, Leander and Dripping Springs are going to be your most conservative pockets of the Austin metro area.

Bryan/College Station:
The City of Bryan voted for Biden. College Station is mostly red except for the campus of Texas A&M.
Might there be a future Collin Alredd going to school right now at A&M?

I must admit that I was quite surprised at the political leanings of the A&M campus.

Houston:
The Woodlands, Kingwood, Tomball, Friendswood, Northwest Harris County, River Oaks and Tanglewood are going to be your most heavily Republican areas. Sugar Land looks about 50/50 between Democrats and Republicans.

Everywhere else in Houston voted for Biden over Trump.
The affluent areas of H-Town that tend to lean left include West University Place, Bellaire and Montrose.
Lots of professors, researchers and doctors live in the high end neighborhoods near the Texas Medical Centers.
Joe Biden got 91% of the Rice University vote compared to 8% for Trump.
This is personally depressing to me, but more importantly these areas have been solid red for decades. They fact they're purple now does not bode well for future elections.
2022 Map: https://www.kxan.com/news/your-local-election-hq/2022-texas-governor-precinct-results/

Abbott, Patrick, Paxton and the rest of the statewide ticket in 2022 won back every suburb that was lost in 2018 and 2020.
Presidential election doesn't equal a Governor election.
An election for POTUS will have a much larger turnout of voters.

I voted for Abbott in 2022. I will not be voting for Trump in 2024.

Kellso
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Jeeper79 said:

The Park Cities in Dallas are an island of red in a sea of blue. And then SMU campus is a blue dot on that red island. There are clear demographic delineations based on income level. The richer, the redder. Plano seems to buck that trend.
Collin County, Plano, Allen and Frisco trending Blue is due to all the corporations that keep moving to Plano and Frisco.

Plano and Frisco are full of people that relocated to the Dallas area from New Jersey, California, Michigan, New York.....etc
DannyDuberstein
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The asia influence is driving Plano and Frisco blue. Tons of Indians and Chinese and they love their overlords. That NE migration happened 40 years ago. It's the more recent 20-30 migration of asians that has really shifted it
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