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Originally Posted by Shawn
Vlajos basically makes the point: Chicago has outsized representation in Springfield because Chicagoland makes up (I'm guessing here) about 5/6th the state's population. That's enough blue voters to shift the whole state and to ensure there's pro-transit, pro-urban state reps to keep the wheels greased. It's the same with Boston (also a blue state, I know): 5 out 6 Massholes live in metro Boston.
My understanding of metro Atlanta is that while the city and few inner burbs like Decatur are blue, the rest of the metro counties are pretty red and in no mood to support transit expansion, for example. Chicago and Boston have some red suburbs too, but generally their suburbanites are somewhere between ambivalent-to-supportive of urban issues. I get the sense that most Atlanta suburbanites are antagonistic-to-ambivalent towards supporting the center city. Is that wrong?
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What you say has been the case traditionally, but that is changing as we speak. After gradually trending blue for the past several election cycles, Gwinnett, Rockdale, Douglas, Henry and Cobb County all flipped to blue in the recent election, thanks to all of the transplants from Chicago / Detroit / NYC migrating to the sunbelt region, African American migration from other parts of the south to the Atlanta area and black flight from Atlanta proper.
There hasn't been a referendum held on transit regionally since 2012 (remind you, when the economy was still in the crapper), but a lot has changed since then and I'm willing to bet more people would give transit expansion another look.
Atlanta's SW suburbs (Fayette, Carroll, Meriwether, Spalding and Coweta County) and far northern suburbs (Forsyth, Cherokee, Hall, Paulding and Bartow) are still solidly red, but that's only because they been growing at a much slower rate and haven't had a huge influx of transplants like the rest of the region. However, they make up such a relatively small portion of the Metro Atlanta's population that their votes would probably be overshadowed by the rest of the region.
With no end in sight of the ongoing net migration to the sunbelt region from the legacy cities in the Midwest / NE and the younger generation being far more progressive overall than their parents/grandparents, states such as Georgia are gong to have an increasingly liberal future. They will also become formidable swing states within the next few election cycles.