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One of the biggest shifts in this election came among Latino voters, among whom Trump made gains of +12 points from 2020, ending up with 45 percent of the vote compared to 53 percent for Harris.
In 2018, 29.1 million Hispanics and Latins were eligible to vote. 62% of Hispanic and Latin voters identified with, or leaned toward, the Democratic Party, whereas 27% of Hispanic voters identified with, or leaned toward, the Republican Party. Hispanic voters who primarily spoke English were more likely to support Republican candidates (33% ...
There are other reasons why I wouldn’t bet too much on a major Trump surge among Latinos and Blacks. First, Republicans seem to be doing better in public opinion polls than in voting booths ...
Democrats did rather poorly among Latino and Black voters this last election. Trump posted numbers with minorities not seen by any Republican candidate since George W. Bush's reelection in 1996.
Further analyzing party ideology, Hispanic Democrats and Democratic-leaning voters are more supportive of same-sex marriage compared to Latino Republicans and the Republican-leaning voting population, with 46% of Democratic Latinos in support and less than half of Republicans, 21% saying they are supportive of same-sex marriage.
In this election, an estimated 55% of Latino male voters favored Trump, up from 32% in 2016, exit polls showed. That shift, experts say, is a sign that the immigrant experience is less of a factor ...
During that period, the Republican Party—particularly in the Southern United States—was seen as more racially progressive than the Democratic Party, primarily because of the role of the Southern wing of the Democratic Party as the party of racial segregation and the Republican Party's roots in the abolitionist movement (see Dixiecrats).
While exit polls suggest that Harris won around 53% of the overall Latino vote in Texas, 54% of Latino men said they supported Trump — a dramatic swing from 36% four years ago.