Unemployment rate (September): 5.5 percent (U.S.: 5 percent)
Median income (2015): $51,492 (U.S.: $55,775)
Poverty rate (2015): 17.4 percent (U.S.: 14.7 percent)
College share (2015): 27.7 percent (U.S.: 30.6 percent)
The bursting of the housing bubble hit Arizona hard — Phoenix, in particular, experienced a huge run-up in home prices during the boom, and the crash left many homeowners underwater and unable to pay their mortgages. But unlike many states that suffered in the bust, Arizona has seen its housing market rebound strongly during the recovery. Still, the state’s unemployment rate remains above the national mark, and employment has barely returned to its prerecession level.
Carl Bialik
People Are Trying To Vote Today. How’s It Going So Far?
Today roughly100 million people are trying to vote across the country, each using a wide range of technologies — many ofwhichfail — facing different ballots and governed by local rules that are enforced by people with varying degrees of experience at the polls. In short, there are bound to be problems. So far, the problems don’t seem unusually severe, though even small problems can prevent people from voting and bigger ones could be on the way as people get off work and crowd polling places closing as soon as a couple of hours from now. Here’s an overview of what we’ve seen so far:
The biggest story is that this is the first presidential election since a Supreme Court decision removed important protections of the Voting Rights Act, leading to hundreds of poll closures around the country. The full impact of those changes probably won’t be clear until all the votes are counted. It probably exacerbated long lines, already a big problem in 2012. At least the weather isn’t likely to dissuade people from voting. Long lines and polling-place closures have a much bigger effect on vote totals thanvoterfraud.
Google is monitoring searches for early signs of trouble spots — the search giant is calling this an experiment. Among swing states, there have been surges in searches related to inactive voters and provisional ballots in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Virginia and North Carolina.
There have been reports of attempted voter intimidation. In Coral Springs, Florida, police moved Trump voters who were blocking entrances to the polls. In East Lansing, Michigan, a man tried to stop two women wearing hijabs from voting.
Eric Trump is among the people who violated laws in some states against posting photos of your completed ballot.
There’s lots of confusion about what constitutes illegal voting or polling-place behavior — for example, a Republican operative tailed a bus carrying Philadelphia voters to the polls, which is completely legal.
Neither of the nation’s two biggest cities are in swing states, but New York and Los Angeles both had widespread voting snafus.
Assuming a Clinton win tonight, Democrats are likely to pick up several state legislatures across the country. If that happens, one of the more likely to flip control would be Colorado’s Senate, currently controlled by Republicans by an 18-17 majority.
Colorado’s statehouse usually doesn’t attract a great deal of national attention; it functions relatively well and hasn’t suffered a great deal of shutdowns or scandals. But here’s something new: It is one of the most rapidly polarizing legislatures in the nation. According to Boris Shor’s research, Colorado now rivals California for the title of most polarized state legislature.
Should the Democrats achieve unified control of the state government today, that could mean considerable leftward movement by the state in the near future. This would fuel even more anger among the state’s active Republicans.