The caricature in the US:
The left would like to fleece the rich in favor of the poor, but the rich are hard to fleece: are politically organized, have influence in government, can lobby, can hide money, etc. So in practice they do the next best thing: fleece the middle class in favor of the poor: that's where a lot of money is too, and it's easier to get it. That some working middle class types aren't fond of this should surprise no one.
There are cultural issues in the south, too.
I don't think voting patterns are that weird, I think the puzzlement here isn't genuine puzzlement, but a kind of back-patting: "but ... we are so great ..."
This is a caricature.
I think this was adequately covered in the posts about "zebra status", each class of society signalling they are not the one under. The working class signalling they are not the welfare class etc.
Prediction: redistributive policies to people who actually have a blue-collar job would find huge popular support as long as they are different in kind, not just numbers. Because fiddling with income thresholds does not given a strong message. But figure out something a working person needs and a not working one not so much. Say, free kindergarten? I thi...
An article from the Wall Street Journal. The original title might be slightly mind-killing for some people, but I found it moderately interesting especially considering that many LessWrongers formed part of the data set for the study the article talks about and a large fraction of us identified as libertarian on the last survey.
Inside the Cold, Calculating Libertarian Mind
The original paper.
Understanding Libertarian Morality: The Psychological Roots of an Individualist Ideology