The Latino Vote in 2012 and the Depth of the GOP Problem

By Manny Diaz and John Zogby, Huffington Post Latino Voices

Former Governor Mitt Romney ran a very competitive race for the Presidency, but the anatomy of his defeat marks a real turning point for the Republican Party. The white vote is shrinking and an African-American candidate can win nationally with less than 40 percent of white support. As we consider demographics, let’s understand that, as a percentage of the total U.S. population, today’s Baby Boomers are 81 percent white; our children, the First Globals, are 61 percent white and very young grandchildren are only 49 percent white. So winning the “non-white vote” is essential for a party’s candidate to stay competitive. What is especially problematic for the GOP is that its share of Latino support keeps shrinking since 2004 and that today even fewer Latino voters consider themselves conservative than they did a decade ago.

Let’s review some numbers. Latinos were 4 percent of 92 million total voters in the 1992 Presidential election; 5 percent of 95 million voters in 1996; 6 percent of 105 million in 2000; 8 percent of 123 million in 2004; and 9 percent of 133 million in 2008. Votes are still being counted, but exit polls suggest that Latinos accounted for 10 percent of the total of about 130 million voters in 2012. While a GOP candidate has had to rely on approximately 35 percent of the Latino vote to win, Mitt Romney received only 29 percent (compared to George W. Bush’s 40 percent in 2004).

We have aggregated the Zogby Polls from 2012 to get a granular picture of this voting group. This is a first look at 2,246 Latino voters polled in 2012 and the picture reveals some terrible news for the GOP and its future. Nearly three in ten Latino Republicans voted for President Barack Obama and just over one in three self-described conservatives voted for his reelection. Two in three men and nearly three in four women supported Mr. Obama. Significantly, just about two thirds of Latinos in the “Swing States” voted for the President.

At least two in three of every income group and 70 percent of Weekly Walmart Shoppers voted for the reelection of the incumbent. Even the fast-growing evangelical voters in the Latino community…

READ MORE HERE

This article was first published in Huffington Post Latino Voices.

Manny Diaz is the former mayor of Miami, president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, and author of Miami Transformed: Rebuilding America, One Neighborhood, One City at a Time.

John Zogby is founder of the Zogby Poll, senior analyst with Zogby Analytics, and author of The Way We’ll Be: The Zogby Report on the Transformation of the American Dream.

[Photo By The Rachel Maddow Show]

Subscribe today!

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Must Read