The Committeepeople candidates are in!

Back in December, I looked at how many votes it takes to become a Democratic Party Committeeperson. Philadelphia’s Committeepeople are the foot soldiers of the Party, responsible for getting out the vote and organizing the party in the 1,686 Divisions. Each Division has 2 committeepeople, so every four years a potential 3,372 Philadelphians are elected to the post (I focus on Democrats here, though the same is true for Republicans).  In 2014, 348 (10%) of those positions went completely unfilled, while another 275 of the positions were won by Write-In candidates, usually in districts with less than two candidates on the ballot.

An open question for the upcoming May Primary is whether Democrats’ newfound energy will translate to the rank-and-file positions of local the local Party. Well, applications have been filed and the Commissioner’s office released the official slate of candidates.. How do the numbers bode for that trickle-down energy?

The hypothetical surge in Committeeperson candidates definitely did not materialize.

The surge in candidates didn’t happen
In total, there are currently 3,204 candidates on the Democratic ballot, after a number of applications were contested and rejected. That compares to 3,098 that survived to the election in 2014. The counts are from slightly different points in the process. The 2014 data uses election results of non-write-in candidates, while the 2018 uses the recently released Commissioner’s data on candidates who survived potential challenges.
There are currently a total of 558 seats that have no candidate on the ballot, 61 fewer than four years ago.

Some 1,615 of those candidates are incumbents. To calculate incumbent candidates, I use fuzzy text matching on candidate names between 2014 and 2018. This tests whether two names are the same based on the fraction of characters that are different. Matching is harder than it may seem because of variability of how candidates write out their names: spellings may change, a candidate may identify as Junior in one but not another, Elizabeth may change her listed name to Betsy. Rather than manually assign incumbency, I automate the process; ‘ve spot checked the fuzzy matching on 40 borderline matches and think I’ve got a good first-order approximation to incumbency assignments.

The wards with the highest number of candidates per division are in Wards 1 and 2 in Queens Village, 55 in the lower Northeast, and 46 in West Philly. The wards with the lowest include 27 and 20, which include Penn and Temple, respectively.

The most astonishing increase is in the 58th Ward in the Northeast, which has 66 more candidates in 2018 than it did in 2014. Ward 42 saw the the greatest decrease
There has not been an obvious surge in energy across the city. 34 of the 66 wards saw increases in the total number of candidates, while 29 saw a decrease.
Which Wards have the energy?

Maybe to see the energy, we need to look in specific places in the city. I often find two useful ways to break up the city: by race, and by vote in the 2016 primary. Race often captures an important axis for identity and experience in the city, while vote in the 2016 primary does two things: differentiates White wards between more establishment (Clinton voters) and less establishment voters (Sanders), and differentiates predominantly Black wards that nonetheless are in the process of gentrifying. Wards 46 and 47 neighbor Penn and Temple, respectively, and are predominantly Black Wards that voted relatively strongly for Sanders, largely because of the sizeable young White population.

There is one dimension that is not captured by the Race x 2016 primary distinction, and that is the Trumpiness of White voters. For example, many White Northeast Wards voted for Sanders, but then also swung towards Trump in the general election. This suggests that their Sanders votes may not have been a declaration of progressivism, but a vote against Clinton. Looking at Sanders-voting White wards will conflate the young progressives in the center of the city with the anti-Clinton voters of the Northeast.

For reference in the upcoming discussion, here is a map of wards’ predominant race and ethnicity, calculated using the 2012-2016 American Community Survey.


Below is a plot of the average number of 2018 committeeperson candidates per division, plotted by predominant race and 2016 Primary vote. For the most part, White wards have the most candidates, followed by Black wards and then last Hispanic wards. The Black ward with the most candidates is ward 46, which is actually a rapidly gentrifying ward that Bernie almost won.
The most interesting trend is within Hispanic wards, where the trend in White and Black wards is reversed: the number of candidates on the ballot increases with vote for Clinton. Wards 7, 19, and 43 voted strongest for Clinton in the city, and have around 2 candidates per Division. I read this reversal as demonstrating that political organization is different within Hispanic wards from the others. In Hispanic wards, party organization is correlated with establishment votes, while the connection is less clear in other types of wards.

So how about the change in the number of candidates? Did this newfound energy make Bernie-loving wards mobilize committeepeople en masse?

Finally, those changes in candidates running also mean that White wards have the most non-incumbents running. Some 42% of candidates in White wards are incumbents, compared to 53% in Hispanic wards and 57% in Black wards.
What to look for in the Primary
The May 15th primary will see many new Committeepeople be seated, and decide the which Democrats run for all of the important (newly-redistricted) U.S. House and the PA State House and Senate races. The surge in energy that many predicted didn’t seem to materialize in residents running for committeeperson, but the primary will give us a much better sense of who is energized where, ahead of the national November midterms (and race for governor).

I’ve got some exciting news planned for the primary. Stay tuned!

District Profile: CD 01

I’ve been profiling each of the new Congressional Districts created when the state Supreme Court declared the prior boundaries unconstitutionally gerrymandered. Today I’m profiling the last of the Congressional Districts in the Philadelphia area, the new District 01.
District 01 mostly aligns with Bucks County, to the Northeast and North of the city. To accomodate the equal population requirement, it adds on Montgomeryville and Hatfield in Montgomery County.

The district is the most evenly split in the Philadelphia region. It voted narrowly for Clinton in 2016, by a slim 50.7 – 49.3 margin. This was gap was two percentage points more Democratic than the state as a whole, though the District was 5.5 point *less* Democratic than the state in 2014. Bucks County provides the prime example of a suburban swing district, with traditional Republicans who swung against Trump. (Of course, the swing did not include all Republican voters by any means, but in this district a few percentage points matters.)
The district is predominantly White, and there is not a single State House District within it that is not at least a plurality White. Within that White population, there are demographic differences. The region immediately outside of Philadelphia looks a lot like an extension of the Northeast: it is the densest part of the County, and less wealthy than the County’s center, around Doylestown. The lowest five statehouse districts, including Newtown, Churchville, and everything below, constitutes a whopping 46% of the population.
That 46% of the population turns out at lower rates than the rest of the District, and only represents 42% of the votes. But in a district so evely divided, subtle swings in any region with 42% of the vote (and especially a turnout increase, which is plausible in district with such low baseline turnout) can determine the election.

Despite the low turnout South of the district, the District as a whole votes at much higher rates than the state. Measured as votes per population over 18, the district voted at a rate nine percentage points more than the state in 2016, and six points more in 2014, the last race for Governor.

The 2016 Democratic Primary illustrates some interesting splits.  Consider the wealthy region around Newtown and Lambertville. It has very high turnout, and was evenly split between Clinton and Trump. However, voters there *strongly* supported Clinton over Sanders. In other districts, we’ve seen a correlation between support for Sanders and support for Trump, which I’ve interpreted as an anti-establishment (or anti-Clinton, depending on your reading) sentiment. However, these wealthy voters appear to be legitimate centrists: with a slight overall Republican lean, who voted against Sanders, while also swinging slightly against Trump.
Below are the racial splits for the District, though they deserve a strong word of caution. The calculation below assigns races the weighted average of the vote in the State House districts that residents live in. In a District so heavily White, the Black, Hispanic, and Asian residents will still live in a predominantly White district, so the differences between races presented will be understated.
This wraps up the Philadelphia District Profiles. The redistricting removed the gerrymandering that was fabricating Republican Districts out of a broadly Democratic region. The result is that every one of the five compact districts in the region would have voted for Clinton in 2016, ranging from narrow victories (today’s CD 01) to the Democratic strongholds in the state (CDs 02, 03). While the state as a whole still represents a disproportionate Republican overrepresentation–Republicans would have won 56% of these districts in 2016, when they won only 50% of the vote–they are dramatically closer to matching the popular vote.