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The Democratic Strategist

Political Strategy for a Permanent Democratic Majority

Slight Shift of Working-Class Voters = Big Democratic Victories

From “Working-Class Voters Shifted Slightly Toward Democrats in the 2025 Gubernatorial Elections” by Jazmine Amoako at americanprogress.org:

In the 2025 Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial elections, Democratic gubernatorial candidates flipped working-class support that had leaned Republican in the 2021 gubernatorial elections and in the 2024 presidential election, according to new analysis from the Center for American Progress. These small but significant overall shifts among working-class voters—defined as voters without college degrees—were driven by relatively large shifts in nonwhite working-class voters. In contrast, white working-class voting behavior remained relatively unchanged, though small shifts toward Democrats in 2025 occurred among white working-class women in Virginia and white working-class men in New Jersey.

In exit polls, the economy was ranked as the top issue by Virginian voters and the second-highest issue by voters in New Jersey. Both Democratic gubernatorial candidates ran economy-focused campaigns and were able to both win large majorities of voters who cited the economy as their top issue and flip working-class support that previously leaned Republican. This outcome suggests that at least some working-class voters remain highly responsive to economic issues and that their candidate preferences can change as they reassess which candidates they perceive as better positioned to address those concerns. At the same time, the results, especially the differences between white and nonwhite voters and between women and men, suggest that other issues also remain critical in shaping working-class voting behavior. These results highlight the diversity of working-class voters and emphasize the importance of a strong economic message as well as the value of addressing noneconomic concerns—echoing previous Center for American Progress Action Fund research about the working class.

Working-class support in both states leaned heavily toward Republican candidates in the previous two election cycles, the 2021 gubernatorial and the 2024 presidential, with noncollege voters backing Republicans at both the state and national levels. The 2025 gubernatorial elections, however, marked a shift as working-class voters moved toward Democratic candidates, driven primarily by nonwhite noncollege voters.

In Virginia, exit polls show that noncollege working-class voters in 2025 narrowly split their support, with then-Democratic Rep. Abigail Spanberger receiving 50 percent of the vote compared with 49 percent for the Republican candidate, then-Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears. Although Spanberger’s victory among these voters was modest, the results represent a departure from outcomes in the 2021 governor’s race and the 2024 presidential election, when Virginia voters without college degrees favored the Republican candidates by 13 and 5 percentage points, respectively.

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