DO AMERICANS AND THE REPUBLICAN PARTY LEARN ANY LESSON FROM THE REELECTION OF PRESIDENT BARACK HUSSEIN OBAMA FOR ANOTHER TERM TO THE WHITE HOUSE? The presidential election results of 2012 showed that the Republican Party of America or the GOP is moving gradually toward a regional, a southern and most likely a white-only party. The GOP did not win any significant votes from the American minority voting blocs (African-Americans, Latino-Americans, Asian-Americans, single white women that are less than 30 years of age and the young men and women between the ages of 19-30 years).
With this political development, the GOP may never win the White House again in our lifetime if the party continues on their current retrogressive political path and the highly divisive political ideologies that are not nationally popular in America of today and mostly likely in the future America. The current electoral data from the 2012 presidential demographics in America showed clearly that no political party can win the White House again with the white-only votes easily. Furthermore, no political party can win the White House again without winning the substantial and significant votes of the Latino-Americans, young Americans, young single women and African-Americans. The rapidly growing Latino-American population in the states of Texas, Georgia and Arizona may likely turn those states in the 2016 or 2020 presidential elections from the traditional red states for the GOP into the battle ground states.
The 21st century American politics is now bigger for the first time in our lifetime more than the political vision of our forefathers over 200 years ago. The politics of race and religious bigotry are no longer the true political answers to political victory in American again. You cannot also lie or deceive American voters and manipulate your way to power easily without openness, truthfulness, honesty and integrity. The politics of money-power, negative television and radio adverts failed to win the votes of most Americans for the GOP presidential candidate, Mitt Romney last November. Finally, the American 2012 presidential demographics and the electoral map both reflected the rapidly changing voting patterns that reflect the 21st century American nation that is now more diverse and no longer monolithic in nature.
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