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As Harris infuses new energy into the Democratic ticket, Latino Democrats are far more willing to campaign with her — and point out how her populist economic policies can help Latino voters.
(Ultimately, Democratic presidential candidates ended up winning Latino voters by 44 points in 2012, 38 points in 2016 and 33 points in 2020, according to the NBC News exit polls in those years.)
Since the election, some pundits and analysts have attributed Trump’s win to — or in the case of some Harris backers, blamed it on — Latino voters, particularly Latino men. The Democratic ...
A majority of 69% [66] of Hispanic/Latino Democrats and Democratic-leaning individuals support this view, in comparison to Hispanic/Latino Republicans and Republican-leaning individuals who less than half (39%) [66] support abortion policies. To compare these statistics with the U.S. adult population, overall 62% of adults in the United States ...
The Latino electorate is not monolithic and can be influenced by various factors such as cultural background, and regional differences, and there is a possibility that Latino voters may be leaning ...
The projected Latin voter participation rate is 52.7% compared to 66.1% for Caucasians and 65.2% for Black Americans in 2008. [19] In 2012, 70% of Hispanic and Latin voters identified with, or leaned toward, the Democratic Party, while 20% of Hispanic voters identified with, or leaned toward, the Republican Party. [20]
The U.S. has an estimated 6 million Afro-Latino or Black Latino adults living in the country, according to the Pew Research Center, but the numbers could be higher. Some of these adults do not ...
Polly Baca – Chair of the Democratic Caucus of the Colorado House of Representatives (1976–79) and member of the Colorado State Senate and the House and Senate of a state Legislature. Herman Badillo – former Congressman from New York; Hector Balderas – New Mexico Attorney General; Nanette Barragán – Congresswoman from California