Yup. People keep forgetting that college educated white people vote Republican at higher rates than poor white people do.
That's simply false. College-educated Whites, especially those with graduate degrees, were already less likely to vote republican than non-college educated White people, and they're moving more and more away from the party's nominee.
College-educated Whites put hole in Trump coalition
where tf did u pull that bullshyt?
It's actually not false. Give me a minute. You and @GSR need to your homework. Trump is notoriously bad stop acting like he is reflective of a trend among that demographic. If Repubs stop opposing shyt like gay marriage they will compete with that demographic for a long time.
Edit: Hold up.
I'm guessing you figured out you were wrong? Here's some receipts:
"During his landslide defeat to Ronald Reagan in 1984, Walter Mondale ran slightly better among college-educated than non-college-educated whites. In the next three elections, Michael Dukakis and Bill Clinton ran almost exactly as well with both groups.
Since then, every Democratic presidential nominee has run better with college-educated than working-class whites. From Al Gore in 2000 through Barack Obama in 2012, the share of the vote won by the past four Democratic nominees among college-educated whites has exceeded their performance among non-college-educated whites by four to seven percentage points."
"In early polling, the class inversion between Clinton and Trump is scaling unprecedented heights. In the CBS / New York Times national poll released last week, Clinton narrowly led Trump among college-educated whites (drawing 47 percent of their vote) but trailed him by fully 20 points among whites without a degree (only 33 percent of whom supported her.) Similarly, the NBC/Wall Street Journal Poll released Sunday placed the two even among college-educated whites (with each drawing 44 percent) but gave Trump a 27-point advantage among those without degrees (only 31 percent of whom backed her.) Even more dramatically, the ABC / Washington Post survey released Sunday also showed Clinton and Trump running almost exactly even among college-educated whites (with Clinton drawing 45 percent of them), but the Republican leading her by 40 points among those without degrees (only 25 percent of whom supported her). In each case, the gap between her strength among college-educated and non-college-educated whites would be much larger than the widest ever previously recorded for a Democratic nominee (Obama’s seven-point differential in 2008)."