dgs49 wrote:Certainly, it seems that Southern California (basically from L.A. down to the Mexican Border) is a good candidate, but is the remainder of the state in any sense homogenous? San Francisco and Sacramento?
Why would San Francisco and Sacramento have trouble being constitutent parts of a new North California? San Francisco is, of course, more liberal than Sacramento; San Francisco is more liberal than most places.
But Sacramento is not a right-wing paradise. Indeed, its reputation, such as it is, for being conservative depends largely on its being in overall-left-of-center California.
Consider eighteen elections -- six each of the most recent presidential elections, the most recent general senatorial elections, and the most recent general gubernatorial elections. Unsurprisingly, San Francisco voted Democratic in all eighteen of those elections.
But Sacramento was not far behind: It voted Democratic in more than three fourths (fourteen (77.78%)) of those elections.
And the variance was only in gubernatorial elections. Sacramento and San Francisco both voted Democratic in six of six presidential elections and in six of six regular senatorial elections.
In contrast, Sacramento voted Republican in four of the last six regular gubernatorial elections. (San Francisco, to no one's shock, voted Democratic in all six of them.) But Sacramento voted the same way as did California as a whole in five of those six elections.
Contrast that against the South California counties of Kern and Orange: Both voted Republican in all eighteen of those elections.
Los Angeles, on the other hand, voted Democratic in all six presidential elections, all six regular senatorial elections, and five of six regular gubernatorial elections. (And in the only regular gubernatorial election in which Los Angeles voted Republican, so did California as a whole, and by a bigger margin than did Los Angeles.)
And yet
dgs49 agrees with me that splitting the southernmost ten counties of California -- "basically from L.A. down to the Mexican Border" -- is a reasonable way of dividing the State (assuming a division into two States, on which he does not agree with me).
It seems to me that keeping super-liberal San Francisco and not-so-liberal Sacramento in North California makes at least as much political sense as does keeping liberal Los Angeles and super-reactionary Kern and Orange in South California.
And both of those alternatives surely make more political sense than does keeping super-liberal San Francisco and super-reactionary Kern and Orange in one undivided California.
Again, however, political affiliations are far from the only factor. I remain of the opinion that turning California's ten southernmost counties into South California and California's other counties into North California is the best available option.
Reason is valuable only when it performs against the wordless physical background of the universe.