AnnaBunny · 18-21, F
Did you Americans know that the colours for our political parties are opposite to America? In Canada red is liberal (democrat) and blue is conservative (republican).
DeWayfarer · 61-69, M
@AnnaBunny
Pretty recent thing yet here is the history in the USA. It wasn't always that way, since the colors were once based on great Britain.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/11/03/heres-why-republicans-red-and-democrats-blue/6144842002/
Pretty recent thing yet here is the history in the USA. It wasn't always that way, since the colors were once based on great Britain.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2020/11/03/heres-why-republicans-red-and-democrats-blue/6144842002/
Here's why Republicans are 'red' and Democrats are 'blue': USA TODAY may have contributed to it
Portrait of Josh Peter Josh Peter
USA TODAY
Today it's almost universally accepted by Americans that Republicans are "red" and Democrats are the "blue." Ever wonder why that is?
Well, we at USA TODAY may have had something to do with it.
Prior to 2000, red and blue did not always respectively denote Republicans and Democrats. That changed with the election of the new millennium and its drawn-out conclusion – which ended in mid-December that year with Republican George W. Bush being declared the official winner over Democrat Al Gore.
That was the first year USA TODAY published its full-color election map, and the same is true with The New York Times.
Paul Overberg, then a database editor who designed USA TODAY's election map, told Smithsonian magazine of the color scheme choice, "The reason I did it was because everybody was already doing it that way at that point."
The color scheme was a simple choice, according Archie Tse, senior graphics editor at The New York Times. As he told The Verge in 2012, "red begins with r, Republican begins with r, it was a more natural association."
In 1976, NBC used its first on-air election map and the bulbs turned red to designate states won by Democratic nominee Jimmy Carter and blue to designate states won by Republican nominee Gerald Ford. As The Verge points out, that color scheme was based on Great Britain's political system, where the liberal party was associated with the color blue.
Portrait of Josh Peter Josh Peter
USA TODAY
Today it's almost universally accepted by Americans that Republicans are "red" and Democrats are the "blue." Ever wonder why that is?
Well, we at USA TODAY may have had something to do with it.
Prior to 2000, red and blue did not always respectively denote Republicans and Democrats. That changed with the election of the new millennium and its drawn-out conclusion – which ended in mid-December that year with Republican George W. Bush being declared the official winner over Democrat Al Gore.
That was the first year USA TODAY published its full-color election map, and the same is true with The New York Times.
Paul Overberg, then a database editor who designed USA TODAY's election map, told Smithsonian magazine of the color scheme choice, "The reason I did it was because everybody was already doing it that way at that point."
The color scheme was a simple choice, according Archie Tse, senior graphics editor at The New York Times. As he told The Verge in 2012, "red begins with r, Republican begins with r, it was a more natural association."
In 1976, NBC used its first on-air election map and the bulbs turned red to designate states won by Democratic nominee Jimmy Carter and blue to designate states won by Republican nominee Gerald Ford. As The Verge points out, that color scheme was based on Great Britain's political system, where the liberal party was associated with the color blue.
TexChik · F
You deserve everything you just voted for.
JimboSaturn · 56-60, M
So happy I don't have to listen to Trump-light Pollieve for years.
BlueVeins · 22-25
Godspeed to your beautiful country. We will die, please go on without us.
JesseInTX · 51-55, M
Enjoy Socialism.
BohemianBabe · M
We're at that point where the good choice is just the one that isn't fascist.
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AnnaBunny · 18-21, F
@BohemianBabe The election isn't over. The Liberal lead shrunk several points.
BohemianBabe · M
@AnnaBunny This does not make me happy.