anson county, north carolina, 50/50, plurality african-american, very close to 50%. the interesting thing over time is the margins for trump and biden, down 13 point in 2016. what happened? there is something about, is the rural/urban divide stronger than the racial divide? i think that is the question. on the republican side. light red to dark red goes this way. we ve got delaware county our lightest red in ohio. sort of the home of college educator republicans that are moving over. lucerne, next door to scranton the old union democrats now voting republican. chattooga home of evangelical whites. light shall medium, dark here. the delaware county has been moving the most this decade. fascinating. you are talking about a country that went for romney by 23 points and went for trump by 17
saying they will turn out are social issues particularly abortion. this is an evangelical community. almost everyone here identifies as baptist or evangelical and abortion is the driving issue, the biggest issue for them. and we ll have a lot of action in the courts on that issue throughout this supreme court term, which will be very interesting to see the impact it has in chattooga county, georgia. we close with duval and, again, sort of the sneaky swing county here in america, a sprawling county, in many ways a mini version of maricopa from two years ago. what have you learned? do democrats and republicans live next door to each other or across the county from each other? a little bit of both, chuck. let s just set this up for our viewers a little bit. when we talk about duval county we are essentially talking about jacksonville, florida, a place
it is difficult to know what percentage of that population can register to vote and what percentage actually votes. i ve been speaking to members of the community. i went to the most popular restaurant, most popular store with a lot of the latinos go to buy their clothing and they are telling me there is a large part of the latino community that are imdprants and some undocumented that are not involved in the political process and those that do vote are divided between republicans and the democrats, so it is going to be interesting to figure out how the latino community here votes and if they become involved. another common thing i m hearing from these leaders is that they actually lack leadership in local politics. so this is a his panic community that is growing and changing and it will make a difference in the elections to come here in washoe county. it s interesting. in clark county down in las vegas it s the unions that are in many ways where the leadership and hispanic
poverty line. that is a significant issue for people all across the commonwealth of virginia so he is focusing on the issues as opposed to the national political figures. we actually did talk to him about some of the issues that are nationwide and affect people in virginia. here is what he had to say. what we re seeing and hearing from all over america is families from everywhere have seen the exact same thing in their own school districts. so as we hear from parents who e-mail me and text me and call me and say stand up for our kids, too, it goes to show that virginians have a chance to do something in virginia that is going to have an effect ob the whole country. that s why i m so proud to be a virginian today and so proud to see virginians come together. it is not republicans against democrats anymore. this is virginia and standing up for our rights and particularly the rights of our kids. there are two different strategies happening here. democrats are bringing out the big guns