Posted on 07/05/2004 11:56:57 PM PDT by FairOpinion
In the two-way contest, Bush enjoys a 12-point lead over Kerry among whites, 53% to 41%. But among blacks, Kerry wins overwhelmingly (81% to 12%), and among Hispanics he enjoys a 19-point lead (57% to 38%).
(Excerpt) Read more at gallup.com ...
My point (besides being kinda bad) is that if we can entice it into voting Republican, let's do that. Then after the Election, we can get back down to internal struggles again.
I am unaware of a lobbying effort of any biz group to bring in any illegals...but do hear this often.
Hispanics have really only one thing in common..language.
Cuban Americans dont vote for RATS...and others that are here legally are split on their votes. Its my beleif that it is too hard to classify Hispanics into a certain group due to their varied make up. IMHO
...good points. I agree with your perceptions on Hispanics. There a huge numbers of Republicans among them. I would like to see them stay with us and ignore the idiots who complain about all of any particular race.
I'm acquainted with quite a few Americans of Mexican descent who don't agree with the La Raza effort and who do insist on English being spoken here. IMO, most of them are far more socially conservative than others who complain about them.
...same with black people. There are many Republicans who are black. We want their votes, conservative activism and friendship. We want them to bring more to our Party.
Since it became part of the racial preferences racket.
All the polls show Bush getting a much larger percentage of the hispanic vote than he got in 2000. Which is encouraging.
Bleed the tax payers...give the money to minorities...and get votes.....
"I think it is quite remarkable that Bush had a significant approval rating among Hispanics, but for some reason -- probably as a result of the Democrats relentless lies, which went unchallenged by Republicans, Bush's approval rating dropped from 67 to 40% among Hispanics over the past year. Half of his support among Blacks evaporated also.
He needs to get that support back."
The Republican Convention will bring around most of the hispanic vote this poll shows as "lost". I'm personally not to concerned about that aspect. Let the President speak in Spanish for two minutes, and thats a done deal.
As for African Americans, neither the President, nor former President Reagan, received more than single digit support. In short, they are less of a factor now than in 1980 or 1984.
Where this nomination with Edwards will help President Bush is with small business owners. They can't afford to provide health care coverage (I'm one of them, btw) due to Trial Lawyers like Edwards. And its very easy to overlook who exactly, makes up the majority in every national election.
It isn't blacks, it isn't hispanics.
Non-Hispanic White bump. Trend of the future?
Pandering drives off the base. We need to stick to the platform.
W will get 8% or less.
I read that the Bush campaign will be targeting Blacks in certain key areas, but not nationally. His views appeal to church-going Blacks, and there are also younger Blacks which are more independent in their thinking.
Let's see Bush got around 40% from Hispanics when he ran for re-election for governor in 1998. And now Gallup thinks 38% is bad for Bush?
Dole actually received 12% of the black vote in 1996. Of Gore's total vote, 28.5% came from blacks and hispanics. Without a significant turnout of minority voters, the Dems lose.
All segments among black voters gave Gore similar levels of support, except when distinguished bygender. Black women gave Gore a higher level of support (94 percent) than black men (85 percent). Sinceblack women were also a larger share of the electorate (six percent) than black men (four percent), their greater support for Gore meant that their contribution to Gores total vote (11.8 percent of the nationaltotal) was significantly higher than black mens contribution (7.1 percent)
In the states where most African Americans live, Gore generally received a higher percentage of the blackvote in 2000 than did President Clinton in 1996 . With the exceptions of Arkansas(Clintons home state), Louisiana, and Maryland, Gore in 2000 received the same or a higher share of theblack vote than Clinton in 1996. Unfortunately for Gore, in many of the states where the black vote represented a large percentage of his total, he lost because support among many white voters was low. In Alabama, Georgia, and Louisiana, more than half of Gores votes were cast by African Americans, yet he lost those states, as he did his home state of Tennessee, where the black share of his vote increased from 24 percent in 1996 to 35 percent.
Blacks contributed 18.9 percent of Gores vote in 2000, up from the 17.1 percent they contributed when Clinton was re-elected in 1996. Hispanic voters also represented a larger share of Gores vote in 2000. In 1996, Hispanic voters represented 7.3 percent of Clintons vote (they were five percent of allvoters and they gave Clinton 72 percent of their votes), while in 2000, they represented 9.6 percent of Gores total vote (they were seven percent of all voters and they gave Gore 67 percent of their votes). In 1996, black and Hispanic votes, combined, made up 24.4 percent of Clintons total. In 2000, 28.5 percent of Gores vote was cast by black and Hispanic voters.
Hispanics will be the Majority in 2050 according to demographic studies. There goes the neighborhood. Welcome to socialism.
BTW, PC sux.
Exactly a reasonable headline and story line for this data would be Bush's minority support grows.
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