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On March 14, 2014, the California Republican Party officially rejected red and adopted blue as its color. Archie Tse, The New York Times graphics editor who made the choice when the Times published its first color presidential election map in 2000, provided a nonpolitical rationale for retaining the red–Republican link, explaining that "Both ...
Never use both "very extreme" colors on the same county map, as they are nearly indistinguishable. They should only be used to indicate areas of nearly-unanimous support for landslide results. Consider using them for precinct maps, if every "very extreme" precinct's result can be easily inferred from the less extreme precincts surrounding it.
Seven blue states—California, Colorado, Illinois, Minnesota, New York, Oregon and Washington—could trend redder Three red states—Alaska, Florida and Ohio— could shift bluer
A key exception to the convention of red to mean the left-wing of politics is the United States. Since about the year 2000, the mass media have associated red with the Republican Party, even though the Republican Party is a conservative party (see red states and blue states). [30]
In some cases, this could take the form of selecting a known associated color (e.g., Bernie Sanders is often represented with a cyan-ish blue), and in others it could just mean selecting several colors not associated with any major party (e.g., in Trump vs Cruz vs Rubio, none should be given red/green/blue/yellow as these all have inapplicable ...
The New York Times reported that Asian Americans are shifting towards the Republican party, citing the Brooklyn Republican Party as an example. In Brooklyn's Chinatowns in 2016, the Democratic Party received 79% of the vote, while in the 2022 gubernatorial election, they received just 64% of the vote. [14]
I like the new Republican color. I think the new Greenback color is a vast improvement (the old one being too "neon green"), and would support a change back to Padfoot's version. The Union and NPL ones look too similar for my taste and support the reversion. Mahalo. --Ali'i 17:22, 18 September 2007 (UTC)
Despite New York City traditionally voting Democratic, Staten Island remains a reliably red borough. In Tuesday's election, where the Republican party won a second term in the White House, 65% of ...