Trump states have lower life expectancy. Is that because they embrace Trumpist policies that make them more likely to die sooner than normal people? Or is it the deleterious impact of those policies that cause them to embrace Trumpism in the first place? Monday, Paul Krugman took a closer look: America's Red State Death Trip. Pointing out a Tom Edsall piece that showed "red and blue voters live in different economies," Krugman's point is that "the political divide is also, increasingly, an economic divide [and] that red and blue voters don’t just live differently, they also die differently."
About the living part: Democratic-leaning areas used to look similar to Republican-leaning areas in terms of productivity, income and education. But they have been rapidly diverging, with blue areas getting more productive, richer and better educated. In the close presidential election of 2000, counties that supported Al Gore over George W. Bush accounted for only a little over half the nation’s economic output. In the close election of 2016, counties that supported Hillary Clinton accounted for 64 percent of output, almost twice the share of Trump country.The thing is, the red-blue divide isn’t just about money. It’s also, increasingly, a matter of life and death.Back in the Bush years I used to encounter people who insisted that the United States had the world’s longest life expectancy. They hadn’t looked at the data, they just assumed that America was No. 1 on everything. Even then it wasn’t true: U.S. life expectancy has been below that of other advanced countries for a long time.The death gap has, however, widened considerably in recent years as a result of increased mortality among working-age Americans. This rise in mortality has, in turn, been largely a result of rising “deaths of despair”: drug overdoses, suicides and alcohol. And the rise in these deaths has led to declining overall life expectancy for the past few years.What I haven’t seen emphasized is the divergence in life expectancy within the United States and its close correlation with political orientation. True, a recent Times article on the phenomenon noted that life expectancy in coastal metropolitan areas is still rising about as fast as life expectancy in other advanced countries. But the regional divide goes deeper than that.A 2018 article in the Journal of the American Medical Association looked at changes in health and life expectancy in U.S. states between 1990 and 2016. The divergence among states is striking. And as I said, it’s closely correlated with political orientation.I looked at states that voted for Donald Trump versus states that voted for Clinton in 2016, and calculated average life expectancy weighted by their 2016 population. In 1990, today’s red and blue states had almost the same life expectancy. Since then, however, life expectancy in Clinton states has risen more or less in line with other advanced countries, compared with almost no gain in Trump country. At this point, blue-state residents can expect to live more than four years longer than their red-state counterparts.Is this all about deaths of despair in the eastern heartland? No. Consider our four most populous states. In 1990, Texas and Florida had higher life expectancy than New York and almost matched California; today, they’re far behind.What explains the divergence? Public policy certainly plays some role, especially in recent years, as blue states expanded Medicaid and drastically reduced the number of uninsured, while most red states didn’t. The growing gap in educational levels has also surely played a role: Better-educated people tend to be healthier than the less educated.Beyond that, there has been a striking divergence in behavior and lifestyle that must be affecting mortality. For example, the prevalence of obesity has soared all across America since 1990, but obesity rates are significantly higher in red states.One thing that’s clear, however, is that the facts are utterly inconsistent with the conservative diagnosis of what ails America.Conservative figures like William Barr, the attorney general, look at rising mortality in America and attribute it to the collapse of traditional values-- a collapse they attribute, in turn, to the evil machinations of “militant secularists.” The secularist assault on traditional values, Barr claims, lies behind “soaring suicide rates,” rising violence and “a deadly drug epidemic.”But European nations, which are far more secularist than we are, haven’t seen a comparable rise in deaths of despair and an American-style decline in life expectancy. And even within America these evils are concentrated in states that voted for Trump, and have largely bypassed the more secular blue states.So something bad is definitely happening to American society. But the conservative diagnosis of that problem is wrong-- dead wrong.
Americans born in 2017 can expect, on the average, to live to be 78.6 years old. But in bright blue states, people will live longer and in the reddest states with the stupidest people, people will die earlier First the 10 states with the highest life expectancy:
• Hawaii- 81.5• California- 80.9• New York- 80.8• Minnesota- 80.7• Connecticut- 80.6• New Jersey- 80.5• Colorado- 79.9• Massachusetts- 79.9• Vermont- 79.9• Washington- 79.9
Those states are all "blue" and Trump lost them all, some in landslides. In Hawaii, California, and New York, the 3 states with the highest life expectancy Trump only received, respectively, 30.03%, 31.62% and 36.52% of the vote. Now let's look at the ten states with the lowest life expectancy:
• Mississippi- 74.5 (same as Vietnam)• West Virginia- 74.8• Alabama- 74.9• Kentucky- 75• Arkansas- 75.4• Louisiana- 75.4• Oklahoma- 75.4• Tennessee- 76• South Carolina- 76.2• Ohio- 76.6
These wretched states, filled with people who make poor choices about everything in life, from what they eat to whom they vote for, all went for Trump in 2016, many by landslides. The three sickest states-- Mississippi, West Virginia and Alabama-- gave Trump, respectively 57.94%, 68.50% and 62.08% landslide victories. Moral of the story: if you vote for Trump-- and for Republicans-- you will die before your time and so will your children. You want change? Forget Trump and his lies... vote Bernie Sanders; he's offering what you want and need.