The Wall Street Journal has an interesting article [SEE HERE] outlining inter-connected data points for various state economies in a post-pandemic environment.
The topline takeaways are: (1) Employment in red states has fully recovered, and now exceeds the number of jobs as before the pandemic. (2) Employment in blue states remains below the pandemic numbers; meaning they have not recovered. (3) Net migration still shows people fleeing blue states like New York, California and Illinois; while (4) Net migration into red states like Florida, Texas, North/South Carolina and Tennessee is continuing.

(Wall Street Journal) – […] Forty-six million people moved to a different ZIP Code in the year through February 2022, the most in any 12-month period in records going back to 2010, according to a Moody’s analysis of Equifax Inc. consumer-credit reports. The states that gained the most, led by Florida, Texas and North Carolina, are almost all red, as defined by the Cook Political Report based on how states voted in the past two presidential elections. The states that lost the most residents are almost all blue, led by California, New York and Illinois. (read more)
The professional business class analysts (eyeroll) at the WSJ attribute the demographic shifts to the worker disconnect from the office. Meaning workers can now work from home and are moving to environments where the quality of life is better. White collar workers no longer bound to the geographic limitations of central office locations.
While some of that is likely accurate, there is no consideration for the lockdown effect. The results of the pandemic showcased a very brutal acceptance, more people now seemingly realizing the politics of their regional leadership has a direct and consequential impact to the quality of their life. The blue state leaders, ideologically disposed to dismissing the opinion of citizens, generally dispatched any consideration for the quality-of-life impact they created. The people were irrelevant.
While there were some new revelations about the ideology of some red state leadership having a favorable disposition toward unilateral power (Ohio, Kentucky examples), for the most part the red states were more free and less intrusive in general life. This socioeconomic facet is difficult to quantify and therefore ignored by the analysts looking at the data.
(WSJ) […] Analysts who have studied the migration attributed much of it to the pandemic’s severing of the link between geography and the workplace. Remote work allowed many workers to move to red states, not because of political preferences, but for financial and lifestyle reasons—cheaper housing, better weather, less traffic and lower taxes, the analysts said.
There is no data on what role, if any, political preferences have played in migration decisions. Some researchers have reported that pandemic restrictions played a role for some people who moved.”
When the pandemic first began, and more specifically when the government rules, fiats and ‘lockdown’ approach first started to surface, many people predicted (CTH included) there would be a cleaving of the population based on ideology. People trapped in blue states would want to flee the rules and live in red states. However, this is difficult to quantify.

I have seen multiple plates in Tulsa over the past few months…like an explosion…from
California
Oregon
Washington
New Jersey
Minnesota
Illinois
Maryland
and even from Hawaii (two different vehicles) and Canada (three)
Here in bluest of blue Hawaii, we have been the “leader” in net out-migration. That is largely due to lack of economic opportunity (unemployment is low, but pay is low due to cost of living here). Schools promote moving on to the UH system, but there isn’t much here for a 4 year grad (somewhat better maybe for 2-yr certifications, but even these are difficult to get a good job with). Except of course for government jobs which is a significant portion of the work force.
Historically the communist-infiltrated ILWU which organized the plantation work force could control things via the local Dem party here, but with the end of large scale agriculture power shifted to the gov’t unions, which were able to get protections in the Hawaii Constitution.
Meanwhile land cost kept artificially high due to use controls has resulted in a lucrative development sector with an emphasis on luxury mainland and international market. That works out great for the unionized craft sector but prices everyone out of the housing market resulting in multi-generation housing being the norm (there is more acceptance of it here in light of East Asian and Hawaiian cultural practices, but it still is demoralizing for millennial and younger generations).
As far as covid, people here love masks and lockdowns. Mainly the gov’t unions who didn’t have to come to work and still got paid. It was horrible for “main street” businesses, but no one speaks for them. Hotel workers (UNITE HERE which is bad but much better than SEIU) had it tough in particular because state unemployment workers didn’t do their jobs.
Hawaiians of course have a unique attachment, but many are forced to relocate to Las Vegas or the west coast just to get by. Republicans here have tried to capitalize on that, but it is difficult as Hawaiian culture tends to accept a paternalistic government that doesn’t sync with most R policy goals.
A further pressure is due to COFA migrants who can immigrate to Hawaii without any control. These migrants are generally the lowest of the low on the economic totem pole.
The covid mandates did a great job of exposing the establishment RINOs and differentiating them from the grassroots, populist, MAGA conservatives.
Some of the RINOs had no problem with government imposed covid mandates. Many more RINOs may have opposed government covid mandates, but were totally fine with private entities imposing their own covid mandates.
I disagree with the position that it’s acceptable for private entities to impose covid mandates. A private employer, school, hospital or other sort of private entity should not be able to force employees, students, customers, patients, or others to receive an unwanted vaccine, including the covid vaccine, wear a mask, or force any other onerous mandate onto others.
Being a private entity doesn’t give one a right to act in a tyrannical manner. In fact, the delegation of tyranny from the government to the private sector is fascism.
I’ve noticed that Fox News hosts in particular are fond of the argument that private entities can issue whatever covid mandates they wish. This applies to both their national hosts and even their local radio station hosts. That is one of many reasons why I don’t like to consume any news or commentary from Fox.
This article, written by a notorious RINO strategist, touches on the differences between RINOs and grassroots conservatives, including their differing views on covid mandates. It’s an attack piece written against the MAGA Republican candidate for Illinois governor, Darren Bailey.
https://www(dot)shawlocal(dot)com/opinion/2022/07/05/darren-bailey-has-to-decide-what-candidate-he-will-be/
I would hope that those fleeing the Blue Tyrant states will leave their “progressivism” behind if they want to enjoy the benefits of Red States. Too many want to have and eat their cakes, while continuing to vote Blue, thinking it will be different this time.