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That's dubious. More people with college debt lean Democrat, but that's largely thanks to age and population distribution. People with high incomes skew Republican, and plenty of them are in law or medicine or finance.
And even this tend isn't reliable long term. The collapse of the Union movement combined with the right wing radio consolidation killed the blue collar Dem voter base. Hardly someone to brag about. Republicans were historically the intelligencia minority and took a hard right popular turn under Nixon/Reagan.
The Texas "liberal turn" has been confined to major metro areas and squelched by the same vote suppression tactics state officials employed in minority ghettos for decades. There's very little reason to believe this state will turn blue any time soon.
Lmao wtf do you mean "collapse of the Union movement"? The railworkers got the paid sick leave they were striking for, UAW is making the GOP sweat and cry, the SCOTUS (compromised as they are) just made it easier for people to file discrimination suits when workers are forced to relocate or lose their job.
This is exactly the shit I'm talking about. More conservative mindsets like this are purely due to lack of awareness of events.
The share of U.S. workers who belong to a union has fallen since 1983, when 20.1% of American workers were union members. In 2023, 10.0% of U.S. workers were in a union.
This, while the size of the US labor force doubled.