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Hispanic voter Manuel Torres in
Denver, Colorado |
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Census Finds Huge Growth in Hispanic
Voters
PHOENIX (By Swing State Project)
July 24, 2009
The Census estimates there were
9.745 million Hispanic voters in
2008, compared to 7.587 million in
2004 an increase of 28.4%.
Overall, an estimated 131.114
million Americans voted in 2008,
compared to 125.736 million in 2004,
an increase of just 4.3%. Another
way of looking at it: there were 5.4
million additional votes cast in
2008 compared to 2004 and about 2.2
million of them were cast by
Hispanics.
The data are more meaningful when
you think in terms of regions. In
2008, dramatically more Hispanics
voted in the Northeast, the South,
the West Coast and the Mountain
West. While Hispanic voters still
are concentrated in the Southwest,
they are a rapidly growing political
force in every part of the country,
except perhaps the Midwest.
The Census Bureau on Tuesday
released a treasure trove of voting
statistics, but perhaps most
interesting were statistics
comparing the Hispanic vote between
2004 and 2008. Here's Governing
magazine's Josh Goodman on what
happened:
The Census estimates that there were
9.745 million Hispanic voters in
2008, compared to 7.587 million in
2004 an increase of 28.4%.
Overall, an estimated 131.114
million Americans voted in 2008,
compared to 125.736 million in 2004,
an increase of just 4.3%. Another
way of looking at it: there were 5.4
million additional votes cast in
2008 compared to 2004 and about 2.2
million of them were cast by
Hispanics.
The gain was particularly dramatic
in California, where there were 2.08
million Hispanic votes in 2004, and 2.96
million in 2008 (which is 21% of all
votes in California). (This rapid gain
dovetails with the sudden pro-Obama
shift in many of California's red
districts.)
Percentage-wise, this gain is nothing
compared with the gain in Georgia,
though; although Hispanic votes are only
3% of the vote there, they shot up from
26,000 to 128,000 votes from 2004 to
2008.
Overall, this has to be seen as
good news for Democrats when a group
that makes up half of all new voters
polls in your favor by a 2-to-1 margin
(Obama polled at 67% in exit polls among
Hispanics).
It's also worth noting that the 5
million increase also included 2 million
more black voters and 600,000 more Asian
voters meaning, if you do the math,
hardly any gains at all came from white
voters. In terms of age groups, young
voters (18-24) were the only group to
show a statistically significant
increase in voting rates (but they still
remained the group with the lowest
turnout: 49%).
Conventional wisdom is the
African-American and youth voter numbers
seem largely driven by a spike in
participation associated with the
historic nature of the Obama candidacy,
and may be poised to fall off a little
in future elections.
However, the increasing Hispanic
numbers were also driven partly by
increased participation: the voting rate
(the percent of persons of that race who
voted) among Hispanics went up 4%, the
same percentage that it went up among
African-Americans.
It remains to be seen whether
Hispanics continue to increase their
participation rate (their voting rate
was still only 49%, compared with 66%
for non-Hispanic whites and 65% for
blacks). But even if their voting rate
falls off, growth among the Hispanic
population will still make them a larger
and larger proportion of the pool of
voters.
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