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NBC continued its color scheme (blue for Republicans) until 1996. [1] NBC newsman David Brinkley referred to the 1980 election map outcome showing Republican Ronald Reagan's 44-state landslide in blue as resembling a "suburban swimming pool". [16] Since the 1984 election, CBS has used the opposite scheme: blue for Democrats, red for Republicans.
As of November 2012, maps for presidential elections produced by the U.S. government also use blue for Democrats and red for Republicans. [104] In September 2010, the Democratic Party officially adopted an all-blue logo. [32] Around the same time, the official Republican website began using a red logo.
From 1984, CBS joined ABC in labeling Republicans red and Democrats blue. CNN switched at the 1992 presidential election and NBC followed suit in 1996, though it chose more of a pink shade for ...
Never use both "very extreme" colors on the same county map, as they are nearly indistinguishable. They should only be used to indicate areas of nearly-unanimous support for landslide results. Consider using them for precinct maps, if every "very extreme" precinct's result can be easily inferred from the less extreme precincts surrounding it.
In American politics, a blue shift, also called a red mirage, [1] [2] is an observed phenomenon under which counts of in-person votes are more likely than overall vote counts to be for the Republican Party (whose party color is red), while provisional votes or absentee ballots, which are often counted later, are more likely than overall vote counts to be for the Democratic Party (whose color ...
Both choices have met with strong resistance from Democrats — and even some Republicans. Trump picked Musk and tech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy to be co-leads of the so-called Department of ...
President-elect Donald Trump has been a divisive, unpopular political figure for years, and he remains so. An analysis of 2024 exit polls show a clear divide based on what issues voters say most ...
Wave elections in the United States are elections in which a political party makes major gains. Based on the "red states and blue states" color coding convention in use since 2000, wave elections have often been described as either "blue waves" or "red waves" depending on which party makes significant gains, referring to a major increase in seats held by either the Democratic Party (associated ...