THE NEW YORK TIMES -- In the United States, Sean McElwee, a policy analyst at the liberal think-tank Demos, and Jason McDaniel, a professor of Political Science at San Francisco State University, examined data from American National Election Studies and reported in The Nation that:
“Trump accelerated a realignment in the electorate around racism, across several different measures of racial animus — and that it helped him win. By contrast, we found little evidence to suggest individual economic distress benefited Trump. The American political system is sorting so that racial progressivism and economic progressivism are aligned in the Democratic party and racial conservatism and economic conservatism are aligned in the Republican party.
“In their essay, McElwee and McDaniel graphed data documenting their findings, which is reproduced in the accompanying chart. White voters who supported Trump were decidedly strong on measures of anti-black affect and hostility to the integration of immigrants into the population of the United States.”