538: Black voters aren't turning out in post-Obama era

Scoop

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Black Voters Aren’t Turning Out For The Post-Obama Democratic Party


By Patrick Ruffini

Filed under Special Elections

gettyimages-583843116.jpg

Then-President Barack Obama and Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton during the 2016 Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia.
AARON P. BERNSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES

The special election in Georgia’s 6th Congressional District is the first major test of the Democratic resistance to President Trump. In one sense, the results of the first round in April were promising for the party. Thanks to an impressive Democratic turnout, Jon Ossoff, the Democrat who advanced to this month’s runoff, almost cracked 50 percent of the vote in a district that’s nearly 10 percentage points more Republican than the nation as a whole.1

The result, moreover, was a reversal of some turnout trends we saw in 2016, when President Trump outperformed the polls on the back of higher turnout in Republican-leaning areas. And if the runoff election on June 20 features a similar electorate, the race will be too close to call.

But the Georgia 6 April primary was a continuation of some 2016 turnout trends too — trends that should worry Democrats. In 2016, turnout among whites was up across the country, and in highly educated areas like the 6th District in the suburbs of Atlanta. This redounded to Democrats’ advantage. At the same time, black turnout was down precipitously, from 66 percent in 2012 to 59 percent in 2016. This black-white turnout gap continued in the first round of Georgia’s special election, where the Democrats got impressive turnout levels from all races and ethnicities — except African-Americans.

Lower black turnout in 2016 might be explained as a reversion to the mean after that group’s historic turnout for Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012. It’s possible that Clinton could never inspire black turnout the way the first African-American president could. But even if this shift is more of a return to the old status quo, Democrats will still have to grapple with these turnout levels going forward, and there are powerful lessons we can learn from the party’s failure to raise or maintain previous black turnout levels in 2016. Painting Trump as a bigot did not motivate more African-Americans to vote, in 2016 or in the Georgia 6th. Hope and shared identity seem to be much more effective turnout motivators than fear.

Elections are decided by two chief factors: Who turns out and which candidate they vote for. It’s been pointed out that turnout alone did not decide the 2016 election — and that the key factor in Trump’s success with groups like the white working class was not that he got way more of them to the polls than Mitt Romney did, but simply that he won a much higher share of their votes.

But if there was one area where Democratic turnout was undeniably weaker in 2016 than 2012, it was among African-Americans — and this is borne out in my own analysis of the 2016 voter files, which consisted of comparing actual 2016 turnout to pre-election modeled turnout expectations. While most of the conversation around electoral demographics has focused on the growing Latino population, African-Americans are still the most electorally influential nonwhite group because they make up a larger share of the voting population both in the U.S. overall and in swing states in particular. And for Democrats, the influence of black voters is further amplified because, as a group, they vote for Democratic candidates by such large margins. Clinton won about 66 percent of Latino voters, compared to Trump’s 28 percent; she won African-American voters 89 percent to 8 percent. Turnout among Latino voters is rising, and this is good news for Democrats, especially as African-American turnout has fallen. But the difference in the margins by which these two groups lean Democratic means Democrats need to work twice as hard to net the same number of votes from the Latino community as they could from the African-American community.

We saw last year how lower engagement among African-American voters is a serious problem for the Democrats, as black turnout declined nearly uniformly across all the swing states in 2016:

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ACTUAL AND EXPECTED TURNOUT
SWING STATE
WHITE BLACK HISPANIC ASIAN OTHER
Colorado +1.7% -4.8% -1.1% +5.1% +2.1%
Florida +3.5 -8.9 +7.7 +4.6 +5.2
Georgia +6.1 -8.5 +11.3 +13.4 +15.9
Iowa -0.9 -15.5 -0.4 -3.2 +0.5
Michigan +1.8 -7.6 +2.9 +2.4 +6.2
North Carolina +6.0 -9.4 +8.0 +11.5 +11.2
Nevada -0.1 -17.7 +1.9 +4.2 +3.3
Ohio -1.5 -13.7 -7.5 -4.4 -4.0
Pennsylvania +4.3 -6.7 +6.0 +10.0 +7.0
Virginia +0.7 -8.3 +1.4 +3.2 +4.9
Black voter turnout fell in swing states in 2016
SOURCES: ECHELON INSIGHTS, L2 INC.

Turnout did not decline equally among all parts of the African-American electorate. The dropoff was particularly steep among men, and especially young men. Across the swing states for which we have voter files, turnout among black men aged 18-29 was 22 percent lower than 2012 levels, while it rose 7 percent among white men in the same age group. Age aside, we also see steeper differences in turnout rates along gender lines among African-Americans than any other racial group.

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ACTUAL AND EXPECTED TURNOUT
RACE/ETHNICITY
FEMALE MALE
White +2.8% +2.9%
Black -7.2 -11.3
Hispanic +6.1 +5.5
Asian +4.7 +6.7
Other +6.0 +5.7
Black men voted at a much lower rates in 2016
SOURCES: ECHELON INSIGHTS, L2 INC.

The post-Obama Democratic Party may be less able to count on black voters turning out at Obama-era levels, forcing it to become more reliant on whites with a college degree, Hispanics and Asians.

Indeed, on April 18th in Georgia, black voters did not necessarily join their white counterparts in a surge of Democratic enthusiasm against Trump. Compared to turnout levels in the 2014 midterms — which, like this special election, was an off-year election where Democratic enthusiasm was low and Obama was not on the ballot — black Democratic turnout in Georgia’s 6th lagged around 10 points behind that of white Democrats, though black voters still turned out at a higher rate than Republicans as a whole did.

As in 2016, the Democratic coalition in the Georgia special election relied somewhat less on African-American votes, gaining numbers instead through higher-than-expected turnout from the district’s fast-growing Hispanic and Asian populations. Nonwhite voters make up a smaller share of the 6th District’s electorate than Georgia’s as a whole, but the trends shown below are consistent with ones we saw in many states in a post-2016 review of voter turnout.

DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ACTUAL AND MODELED MIDTERM TURNOUT
RACE/ETHNICITY
DEMOCRAT REPUBLICAN NONPARTISAN
White -3.2% -15.9% -19.9%
Black -14.1 -22.5 -28.9
Hispanic -0.5 -17.5 -9.8
Asian +11.8 -10.9 +9.2
Other +8.7 -10.2 +11.4
Black turnout lagged other groups in the Georgia 6 primary
SOURCES: ECHELON INSIGHTS, L2 INC.

Democrats may partially solve their midterm turnout problem before they repair the cracks in their Electoral College strategy. In 2018, Democrats may be able to win over and turn out the kinds of white voters who showed up for them in Georgia’s 6th — educated, left-leaning, but usually unlikely to vote in midterms — even as “the resistance” fails to appeal to the African-American community that has been a major element of Democrats’ traditional base. But that strategy is more limited in 2020, when marginal voters are concentrated in African-American and other nonwhite communities, and no candidate has shown an Obama-like ability to reach them.

Black Voters Aren’t Turning Out For The Post-Obama Democratic Party
 

GnauzBookOfRhymes

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Most groups are specifically targeted. If you're a Dem hoping to gin up Latino votes, you better be saying the right things on immigration reform. If you're in a city with a large gay population, you better support same sex marriage and adoption by same sex couples.

Problem is that black people are not targeted with specific messaging. Dems just assume that all they need to do is make very vague/general pronouncements and that black Dems will fall in line. For the most part, black Dems that are politically active/aware will make the connections and vote accordingly. But you're not going to be able to capture new voters or excite the somewhat uninterested to get out and vote.
 

CASHAPP

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Oh really??? But CNN told me for YEARS from 2009 to 2016 that Obama built a "coalition" :mjlol: that would last for generations :mjlol:

They told me they would never have to try hard again cause a Black man became president and had record turnout so it was impossible for Dems to lose support again :mjlol:

Cocky motherfukkers lol.

There new DNC chairman has had problems getting promotion and they still think people, especially Black people give a fukk about Russia.
 

William F. Russell

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by not voting and allowing conservatives who push policies that are directly detrimental to blacks? :mjlol:

Maybe it's a start for black people to hold their votes until our demands are met.

Of course, in order to have demands, we need a code and structure.

But even without that code and structure, the fact that blacks are not being lambs for the Democratic Party is somewhat refreshing.

WE need to force BOTH political parties to EARN our vote, not bank on it. :GhostfaceStare:
 

theworldismine13

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Oh really??? But CNN told me for YEARS from 2009 to 2016 that Obama built a "coalition" :mjlol: that would last for generations :mjlol:

They told me they would never have to try hard again cause a Black man became president and had record turnout so it was impossible for Dems to lose support again :mjlol:

Cocky motherfukkers lol.

There new DNC chairman has had problems getting promotion and they still think people, especially Black people give a fukk about Russia.

i predicted in this board years ago that hillary was gonna lose cuz black people are gonna turn away from the democratic party, and i was laughed at
 

Pressure

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Maybe it's a start for black people to hold their votes until our demands are met.

Of course, in order to have demands, we need a code and structure.

But even without that code and structure, the fact that blacks are not being lambs for the Democratic Party is somewhat refreshing.

WE need to force BOTH political parties to EARN our vote, not bank on it. :GhostfaceStare:
:ehh: more troll logic.

If we never vote, people will be forced to acquiesce to our demands in some hypothetical time period going forward. When has that ever happened in American History? :mjlol:
This disregards the self harm you are doing yourself in the process. Cut off your own nose brehs. :mjgrin:

Instead of becoming involved, working with campaigns, organizing, and creating a movement you suggest that it's better to sit on the sidelines until one day white savior decides he needs you? Even if this works, it goes back to the status quo once they get your vote. Then what, will you sit out again for 4 election cycles until white daddy decides he needs your vote again? SDNL strikes again. :pachaha:
 
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acri1

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i predicted in this board years ago that hillary was gonna lose cuz black people are gonna turn away from the democratic party, and i was laughed at

This didn't happen though.

What happened is that turnout was lower, not that votes were being split to any notable degree. Clinton still won around 90% of the black vote.
 

Piff Perkins

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Black vote going back to post-Obama levels. We'll see. I tend to think population growth alone will ensure an increase in the black vote, although not to uber Obama levels.

Also gotta wonder how much of this boils down to whites having a candidate who excited them (Trump) and everyone else being stuck with the least interesting/inspiring choice (Hillary). IE perhaps a better candidate in 2020 will do better.
 

TNC

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This is borderline a dumb article


OF COURSE the black vote is going to be down from last time, the Dems didn't run a black or likeable candidate.

Obama's turnout was not and should never have been considered the new standard. His turnout was unique to him and of course he is going to have abnormally high black turnout, its because he's black. Mitt Romney had abnormally high Mormon turn out as well, those Mormon's didn't show up for Trump either. If you go back and look at the black turn out for Gore and Kerry, its similar to what Hillary had.

This article is evidence that the Dems overlook the black vote because they did nothing to entice the black vote and just assumed Obama would have carried all over them over to the party and not just him.


They should take note and run a Hispanic man for 2020. :sas1:
 

theworldismine13

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This didn't happen though.

What happened is that turnout was lower, not that votes were being split to any notable degree. Clinton still won around 90% of the black vote.

What did happen and what is continuing to happen is black voters turning away from the Democratic Party

What did happen is that Hillary lost
 

William F. Russell

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Why would people who don't vote receive political benefits?

What political benefits have blacks gained by voting at an 80% rate for one political party for the last 50 years (besides the Civil Rights Act)? What have black people exclusively gained from politics since that legislation?

What I'm advocating for in a roundabout way is that black people make both major political parties EARN our collective vote. Instead of being a guaranteed voting bloc for one political party, we need to hold back and sell our vote in exchange for specific demands while, at the same time, developing our collective power, wealth, and influence.

When we do so, we force BOTH political parties to court and cater to us (a la the Latino and the LGBT communities). By adhering to one political party by default, neither party has to do much to sell us on their candidates. Other crucial voting blocs don't have this issue and, non coincidentally, they manage to gain tangible benefits.
 
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