Thursday, January 20, 2011

Flashback: Who Voted in 2008 Presidential Election -Articles & Links

http://blogs.wsj.com/washwire/2009/07/20/census-bureau-heres-who-voted-in-2008/

* July 20, 2009, 2:52 PM ET

Census Bureau: Here’s Who Voted in 2008
By admin ~ June Kronholz, guest contributor, reports on the 2010 Census.

About five million more Americans voted in the 2008 elections than in the elections four years earlier, including an additional two million African-Americans, two million Hispanics and 600,000 Asians.

The number of young voters was up too, according to a report released today by the U.S. Census Bureau. About 49% of voters aged 18 to 24 cast ballots in 2008, up from 47% in 2004. Turnout among young black voters was 55%, eight percentage points higher than four years earlier.

But the real heroes of the election appear to be old folks: 73% of black women and 74% of white men and women between ages 65 and 75 voted in 2008.

Voter turnout was highest—about 75%– in Minnesota and the District of Columbia, which doesn’t have a representative in Congress but does have one electoral vote. Lowest turnout was in Hawaii—even though President Barack Obama grew up in the Aloha State—and in Utah, where just over half of voters went to the polls.

The census figures don’t show how ethnic, racial and age groups voted. But Obama campaign strategists had counted on a big turnout by blacks, Hispanics, women and young people, who typically vote Democratic. As it happened, turnout among blacks, Hispanics and Asians increased by four percentage points in 2008 from four years earlier, while turnout by white non-Hispanics was down by one percentage point.

Even so, fewer than half of registered Hispanic voters told the Census Bureau they had voted. That was in spite of huge voter-registration drives in Hispanic neighborhoods, a recently failed immigration bill that raised political consciousness among many Hispanics, and the avid courting of the Hispanic community by both Obama and Republican nominee Sen. John McCain.

Turnout by all races and all ages was about 64%. About 65% of blacks and 66% of non-Hispanic whites told the Census bureau they had voted.

Although the percentage of young voters increased, fewer than half of 18-24 year-olds who are registered said they went to the polls, and 42% said they aren’t even registered. By comparison, turnout was 69% among voters aged 45 to 64 and 72% among voters 65 to 74.

The 2008 election also suggested that the gender gap will continue to be politically important. About 66% of women voted compared with 62% of men. Neither was statistically different from 2004, but 10 million more women said they voted than did men in 2008—70.4 million women compared with 60.7 million men.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
http://pewresearch.org/pubs/1024/exit-poll-analysis-hispanics
Pew Hispanic Center

How Hispanics Voted in the 2008 Election

PrintEmailShare
Updated November 7, 2008 to reflect updated exit poll results
Figure
Hispanics voted for Democrats Barack Obama and Joe Biden over Republicans John McCain and Sarah Palin by a margin of more than two-to-one in the 2008 presidential election, 67% versus 31%, according to an analysis by the Pew Hispanic Center of exit polls from Edison Media Research as published by CNN.1 The Center's analysis also finds that 9% of the electorate was Latino, as indicated by the national exit poll. This is higher, by one percentage point, than the share in the 2004 national exit poll.2
Nationally, all Latino demographic sub-groups voted for Obama by heavy margins. According to the national exit poll, 64% of Hispanic males and 68% of Hispanic females supported Obama. Latino youth, just as all youth nationwide, supported Obama over McCain by a lopsided margin -- 76% versus 19%.
Figure
Obama carried the Latino vote by sizeable margins in all states with large Latino populations. His biggest breakthrough came in Florida, where he won 57% of the Latino vote in a state where Latinos have historically supported Republican presidential candidates (President Bush carried 56% of the Latino vote in Florida in 2004). Obama's margins were much larger in other states with big Latino populations. He carried 78% of the Latino vote in New Jersey, 76% in Nevada, and 74% in California.
In an election year when voter participation rose across the board, Latinos increased their share of the national vote to 9% from 8% in 2004 according to the national exit poll. In several states, however, Latinos represented a much larger share of voters this year than in 2004. The largest increases in the share of voters who are Hispanic occurred in the states of New Mexico (9 percentage points higher), Colorado (5 points higher) and Nevada (5 points higher), all three battleground states in this year's election.
Nationwide, the Latino vote was significantly more Democratic this year than in 2004, when President Bush captured an estimated 40% of the Hispanic vote, a modern high for a Republican presidential candidate.3
Figure
But even though McCain's Latino vote fell well below that of President's Bush's in 2004, it was still much higher than the 21% share of the Hispanic vote that Sen. Robert Dole received as the GOP presidential nominee in 1996. McCain's Latino vote this year was similar to the 30% share of the Latino vote that GOP congressional candidates received in 2006.
Meantime, Obama's 67% share of the Latino vote in the 2008 general election represented a major reversal of fortunes for him since the Democratic primaries, when he lost the Latino vote to Sen. Hillary Clinton by a margin of nearly two-to-one4 . No other major demographic voting group in the country swung so heavily to Obama as Latinos did between the primaries and the general election this year. According to the 2008 National Survey of Latinos, conducted in June and July of this year, 75% of Latino registered voters who said they supported Clinton in the primaries switched their support to Obama.5
Find a description of the methodology and charts showing exit poll results for the Latino vote in 9 states at pewhispanic.org.

Notes

1 The analysis in this report is limited to states with sufficiently large Hispanic samples in state exit polls. These states include Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, and Texas. Voter survey results from the national and state exit polls were obtained from CNN's Election 2008 website at 1 pm on Wednesday, November 5, 2008.
2 Utilizing the national exit poll to estimate the share of the electorate that is Hispanic generally produces an estimate that is higher than that observed in either aggregated state exit polls or from the Census Bureau's November voting supplement of the Current Population Survey. In 2004, according to the national exit poll, 8.4% of voters were of Hispanic origin. However, according to the aggregated state exit polls, 7.5% were Hispanic. And according to the 2004 November CPS, 6% of voters were Hispanic. Estimates of the Hispanic share of the electorate for 2008 from the aggregated state exit polls and the 2008 November CPS will not be available until 2009. For more details on the issues associated with using these data sources to estimate the share of the electorate that is Hispanic, see "Hispanics and the 2004 Election: Population, Electorate and Voters" by Roberto Suro, Richard Fry and Jeffrey Passel
3 There is continuing uncertainty over whether President Bush received 40% of the Hispanic vote in 2004, as indicated by exit polls in the 50 states and the District of Columbia conducted on Election Day, or 44%, as indicated by the nationwide National Election Pool exit poll. Reasons for the differing estimates are spelled out in "Hispanics and the 2004 Election: Population, Electorate and Voters," by Roberto Suro, Richard Fry and Jeffrey Passel (2005).
4 Susan Minuskin and Mark Hugo Lopez, "The Hispanic Vote in the 2008 Democratic Presidential Primaries," Pew Hispanic Center, June 2008.
5 Mark Hugo Lopez and Susan Minuskin, "2008 National Survey of Latinos: Hispanic Voter Attitudes," Pew Hispanic Center, July 24, 2008.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Humane-Liberation-Party Blog
http://help-matrix.blogspot.com/

Humane-Liberation-Party Portal
http://help-matrix.ning.com/

@Peta_de_Aztlan Blog
http://peta-de-aztlan.blogspot.com/
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++

555HELPLOGO

No comments:

Post a Comment

Please keep comments humane!