A retired middle school principal was so moved by Donald Trump that he switched his Democratic Party registration so he can vote for the Republican billionaire in next Tuesdays Pennsylvania primary. So did the daughter of a steel worker, who twice voted for President Obama but says she is over the Democrats' political correctness.
And a husband-wife team of Trump volunteers shes a laid-off airport worker, hes a laid-off truck driver -- were Democrats for 30 years, until recently.
We always voted Democrat, said Laurie McGinnis, 49, as her husband, Ricky, 57, hung a Trump banner outside their South Greensburg home. But not any more.
Some of these newly minted Pennsylvania Republicans are simply formalizing a process that began with Ronald Reagans election in 1980, when conservative-leaning Democrats began shifting away from the party in this faded industrial Rust Belt.
Others moved abruptly, inspired by Trump and fed up with a party they say no longer speaks their language.
Together the result is one of the most sizable shifts of partisan allegiance ever seen in Pennsylvania: 61,500 Democrats have become Republicans so far this year, part of a 145,000 jump in Republican registrations since the fall 2015 election, according to state figures analyzed by both parties. Its more new Republicans than in the previous four years combined.
Remainder of story is here.