When Republicans Were Blue and Democrats Were Red
The era of color-coded political parties is more recent than you might think
- By Jodi Enda
- Smithsonian.com, November 01, 2012, Subscribe
Television’s first dynamic, color-coded presidential map, standing two stories high in the studio best known as the home to “Saturday Night Live,” was melting.
It was early October, 1976, the month before the map was to debut—live—on election night. At the urging of anchor John Chancellor, NBC had constructed the behemoth map to illustrate, in vivid blue and red, which states supported Republican incumbent Gerald Ford and which backed Democratic challenger Jimmy Carter.
The test run didn’t go well. Although the map was buttressed by a sturdy wood frame, the front of each state was plastic.
“There were thousands of bulbs,” recalled Roy Wetzel, then the newly minted general manager of NBC’s election unit. “The thing started to melt when we turned all the lights on. We then had to bring in gigantic interior air conditioning and fans to put behind the thing to cool it.”
That solved the problem. And when election results flowed in Tuesday night, Nov. 2, Studio 8-H at 30 Rockefeller Center lit up. Light bulbs on each state changed from undecided white to Republican blue and Democratic red. NBC declared Carter the winner at 3:30 a.m. EST, when Mississippi turned red.
That’s right: In the beginning, blue was red and red was blue and they changed back and forth from election to election and network to network in what appears, in hindsight, to be a flight of whimsy. The notion that there were “red states” and “blue states”—and that the former were Republican and the latter Democratic—wasn’t cemented on the national psyche until the year 2000.
Chalk up another one to Bush v. Gore. Not only did it give us “hanging chads” and a crash course in the Electoral College, not only did it lead to a controversial Supreme Court ruling and a heightened level of polarization that has intensified ever since, the Election That Wouldn’t End gave us a new political shorthand.
Twelve years later, in the final days of a presidential race deemed too close to call, we know this much about election night Nov. 6: The West Coast, the Northeast and much of the upper Midwest will be bathed in blue. With some notable exceptions, the geographic center of the country will be awash in red. So will the South. And ultimately, it is a handful of states—which will start the evening in shades of neutral and shift, one by one, to red or blue—that will determine who wins.
If enough of those swing states turn blue, President Barack Obama remains in the White House four more years. If enough become red, Gov. Mitt Romney moves in January 20, 2013. For now, they are considered “purple.”
Here’s something else we know: All the maps—on TV stations and Web sites election night and in newspapers the next morning—will look alike. We won’t have to switch our thinking as we switch channels, wondering which candidate is blue and which is red. Before the epic election of 2000, there was no uniformity in the maps that television stations, newspapers or magazines used to illustrate presidential elections. Pretty much everyone embraced red and blue, but which color represented which party varied, sometimes by organization, sometimes by election cycle.
There are theories, some likely, some just plain weird, to explain the shifting palette.
“For years, both parties would do red and blue maps, but they always made the other guys red,” said Chuck Todd, political director and chief White House correspondent for NBC News. “During the Cold War, who wanted to be red?”
Indeed, prior to the breakup of the Soviet Union little more than two decades ago, “red was a term of derision,” noted Mitchell Stephens, a New York University professor of journalism and author of A History of News.
“There’s a movie named Reds, ” he said. “You’d see red in tabloid headlines, particularly in right wing tabloids like the Daily Mirror in New York and the New York Daily News.”
Perhaps the stigma of red in those days explains why some networks changed colors— in what appeared to be random fashion—over the years. Kevin Drum of the Washington Monthly wrote in 2004 that the networks alternated colors based on the party of the White House incumbent, but YouTube reveals that to be a myth.
Still, there were reversals and deviations. In 1976, when NBC debuted its mammoth electronic map, ABC News employed a small, rudimentary version that used yellow for Ford, blue for Carter and red for states in which votes had yet to be tallied. In 1980, NBC once again used red for Carter and blue for the Republican challenger, Ronald Reagan, and CBS followed suit. But ABC flipped the colors and promised to use orange for states won by John Anderson, the third-party candidate who received 6.6% of the popular vote. (Anderson carried no states, and orange seems to have gone by the wayside.) Four years later, ABC and CBS used red for Republicans and blue for Democrats, but the combination wouldn’t stick for another 16 years. During the four presidential elections Wetzel oversaw for NBC, from 1976 through 1988, the network never switched colors. Republicans were cool blue, Democrats hot red.
The reasoning was simple, he said: Great Britain.
“Without giving it a second thought, we said blue for conservatives, because that’s what the parliamentary system in London is, red for the more liberal party. And that settled it. We just did it,” said Wetzel, now retired.
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Comments (9)
The real genius was liberal journalist Tim Russert, who promoted the terms "red states" and "blue states" to refer to Republicans and Democrats, respectively, during the televised coverage of the 2000 presidential election (during which only two of the networks used that color scheme). It was a brilliant stroke of political strategy to reverse the long-standing convention, observed worldwide and still the rule outside of the United States, in which the color red was associated with Socialist and leftist revolutionary movements, and the color blue was associated with conservatives and other movements associated with individual economic freedoms.
Posted by Gradivus on November 8,2012 | 12:00 PM
In most of Europe, the colour (yes, with the u) coding is red for socialists, yellow for liberals and blue or black for conservatives (plus green for environmentalists). In England we have red for the Labour party, green for the Greens, yellow for the Liberal Democrats, blue for the Conservatives and purple for UKIP (anti-Europeans). That's roughly left to right. Scotland adds on a paler yellow for their nationalist party, Wales green for their nationalists (which one of the Welsh nationalists and the Greens gets a darker shade of green depends on the mapmaker). Germany is red for the social democrats (SPD), red for the party of the left (Die Linke - former communists), green for the Greens, yellow for the liberals (FDP) and black for the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU - moderate conservatives). The pirate party uses purple. France generally uses red for the socialists and blue for the gaullists; other parties rise and fall too fast to settle on a colour.
Posted by Richard Gadsden on November 6,2012 | 03:36 PM
Dems are still commie red and always will be despite the leftist infested news media attempts to change the fact.
Posted by Joseph L Cooke on November 6,2012 | 03:32 PM
I thought Reagan was "blue" in his election. If I recall, some on the Democratic side felt upset that they were made red because of its association with communism. Apparently the mainstream media gave in to that complaint and have made Republicans red ever since.
Posted by MarcV on November 6,2012 | 03:04 PM
So that explains it. Political parties always used red for the other side. Now that practically all the news media is in the tank for Democrats, naturally they consider Republicans the "other side" and have settled on depicting them in Red.
Posted by Sam on November 2,2012 | 07:36 PM
Have been curious about that particular color switch; although, I'd attributed it to Nancy Reagan's always wore a red outfit whenever her husband gave a speech wherein she played her part by wearing red and looking on adoringly.
Posted by Lisbeth Jardine on November 2,2012 | 04:40 PM
Disagree with red for republicans and blue for democrats. The LEFT side of airplanes have a RED light; the PORT side of ships has a RED light; HOT water spigot's are designated with color RED. Democrats are LEFT and should be RED states. Republicans are RIGHT and should be BLUE states. Thank you. /-Dori
Posted by Dori Nelms-Ossman on November 2,2012 | 11:51 AM
So which is it? Red Repulican Blue Democrat tdw
Posted by Tom Whalen on November 1,2012 | 07:35 PM
Back then Red was the Communist Color. Why is this not mentioned in the article.
Posted by bicbic on November 1,2012 | 05:54 PM