Hispanic Voters Now Evenly Split Between Parties, WSJ Poll Finds

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FULL RESULTS: https://s.wsj.net/public/resources/documents/Baseline Nationwide Poll Nov 2021.pdf

Hispanic Voters Now Evenly Split Between Parties, WSJ Poll Finds

Hispanic Voters Now Evenly Split Between Parties, WSJ Poll Finds
Republicans have made rapid gains among a crucial voting demographic that has long favored Democrats
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Voters waiting to cast their ballots in the 2020 U.S. presidential election in Phoenix.
Photo: edgard garrido/Reuters



Hispanic Voters Now Evenly Split Between Parties, WSJ Poll Finds

Hispanic Voters Now Evenly Split Between Parties, WSJ Poll Finds
Republicans have made rapid gains among a crucial voting demographic that has long favored Democrats
Voters waiting to cast their ballots in the 2020 U.S. presidential election in Phoenix.
Photo: edgard garrido/Reuters
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Dec. 8, 2021 9:12 am ET
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The nation’s large and diverse group of Hispanic voters is showing signs of dividing its support between Democrats and Republicans more evenly than in recent elections, a new Wall Street Journal poll finds, a troubling development for the Democratic Party, which has long counted on outsize Hispanic support.

One year after giving Democratic House candidates more than 60% of their vote, according to polls at the time, the Journal survey found that Hispanic voters are evenly split in their choice for Congress. Asked which party they would back if the election were today, 37% of Hispanic voters said they would support the Republican congressional candidate and 37% said they would favor the Democrat, with 22% undecided.

Hispanic voters were also evenly divided when asked about a hypothetical rematch in 2024 of the last presidential contenders, with 44% saying they would back President Biden and 43% supporting former President Donald Trump. In 2020, Mr. Biden won 63% support among Hispanic voters, nearly 30 points more than Mr. Trump, according to AP VoteCast, a large survey of the presidential electorate.

‘Latinos are more and more becoming swing voters.…They’re a swing vote that we’re going to have to fight for.’

— Democratic pollster John Anzalone
Hispanic voters account for about 1 in 8 eligible voters and are one of the fastest-growing groups in the electorate, factors that compound Democratic fears about any deterioration in support.

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“Latinos are more and more becoming swing voters.…They’re a swing vote that we’re going to have to fight for,’’ said Democratic pollster John Anzalone, whose company conducted The Wall Street Journal Poll along with the firm of Republican pollster Tony Fabrizio.

The Survey

Read the Results

Messrs. Anzalone and Fabrizio said the poll showed that economic issues were the main concern among Hispanic voters, drawing Hispanic men, in particular, toward the GOP.

Hispanic voters in the survey ranked economic issues as the priority for Mr. Biden and Congress to address. Hispanic men said Republicans had the better economic policy, by a margin of 17 points. Hispanic women, by contrast, said Democrats had better economic plans, by a 10-point margin.

A majority of Hispanic men said they would like to return to the policies that Mr. Trump pursued as president, while a majority of Hispanic women said they would rather stick with Mr. Biden’s policies.

“You see in this poll that there’s a group of Hispanic men who were without a doubt enticed by Trump and have become more Republican. We have more work to do on that,’’ said Mr. Anzalone, referring to Democratic candidates and their allies.

Mr. Fabrizio said: “This says to me that the economy matters, particularly to Hispanic men. The economy and economic factors are driving them.”

The survey is the first under a new Wall Street Journal Poll that will explore the forces driving American politics and changes in society. The firms of Messrs. Fabrizio and Anzalone will work together on surveys on the political landscape.

The Journal survey included 1,500 registered voters, including 165 Hispanic voters. The margin of error for the Hispanic sample was plus or minus 7.6 percentage points.

‘This says to me that the economy matters, particularly to Hispanic men. The economy and economic factors are driving them.’

— Republican pollster Tony Fabrizio
Strategists in both parties have been working since the 2020 election to calculate the size of the shift among Hispanic voters to the GOP and to understand its causes. One in-depth study, by Catalist, which compiles and analyzes voter data for Democratic candidates and progressive causes, found that Hispanic voters swung toward Mr. Trump by 8 points compared with 2016 in the two-party vote.

Shifts in some parts of the country were larger. In its analysis of the 2020 electorate, Equis Labs, which studies the Latino electorate, found swings toward the GOP of 20 points in parts of Florida’s Miami-Dade County; of 12 points in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas; and double-digit swings in parts of the Northeast. In South Florida, the shift was big enough to flip two congressional seats to the GOP, the firm concluded.

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Analyses by various groups have cited a range of causes for the shift, including higher turnout among the most conservative Hispanic voters, GOP success in persuading voters who turn out infrequently and frustration over job losses due to pandemic-related business shutdowns.

In last month’s election for governor in Virginia, AP VoteCast found that Republican Glenn Youngkin, who won the race, outpolled his Democratic opponent among Hispanic voters.

In the Journal survey, Hispanic voters had a negative outlook on the economy, with 25% saying it was headed in the right direction and 63% saying it was headed in the wrong direction. That 38-point gap compared with a 31-point gap among all voters.


Hispanic voters saw Republicans in Congress as better able than Democrats to handle some economic issues, such as reining in inflation and cutting the federal deficit. They also saw Republicans as best able to secure the border.

The Hispanic voters saw Democrats in Congress as better able to control the Covid-19 pandemic, rebuild infrastructure and make healthcare more affordable.

The results showed Hispanic voters differing little from the overall electorate in their political preferences. Hispanic voters mirrored the overall voter pool, for example, when asked how Mr. Biden was handling his job. Some 42% approved of the president’s job performance and 54% disapproved—in line with the 41% approval and 57% disapproval among the broader voting public.
 

JadeB

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This shouldn't be happening. Young voters should be out voting more.
 

Scustin Bieburr

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So much for "black and brown":mjlol:
shyt never existed. People always throw the brown and other races in to make whites more comfortable because the idea of advocating for something specifically for us is a non starter with cacs.

Yes they know we built the country

Yes they know we contributed to every war that has ever been fought and put in more work than white soldiers

Yes they know what their fathers and grand fathers did to us.

They don't care.
 

Piff Perkins

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People on the Coli always say black people diversify their vote in order to force concessions from democrats but I feel like this is a perfect example that democrats aren't changing shyt. Hispanics are one of the most diverse voting groups in the country yet the democrat reaction has been the same since 2008: promises on immigration that never happen. Sure Obama delivered on DACA but that's basically it.

The result is you other-ize minority voting groups. When it's time to talk about issues that impact most people, like small businesses or healthcare, they trot out to the white folks. But if there's some niche racial issue that's all the blacks and browns are good for. Some promises and then you move on. Clearly Hispanics have heard enough and got other shyt they want to focus on as well. Hell a lot of second and third generation Hispanics look at illegal immigration the same way racist cacs do. They hate that shyt.
 

North of Death

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Good for them, this is why they have more political leverage and capital than African Americans ....Black folk still thinking vothing 97% Dem in presidential elections will forever take the L in the bigger poltical picture
 
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Good for them, this is why they have more political leverage and capital than African Americans ....Black folk still thinking vothing 97% Dem in presidential elections will forever take the L in the bigger poltical picture
How is this good for them?

you’re just saying shyt without reflecting on what your actual values are
 

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People on the Coli always say black people diversify their vote in order to force concessions from democrats but I feel like this is a perfect example that democrats aren't changing shyt. Hispanics are one of the most diverse voting groups in the country yet the democrat reaction has been the same since 2008: promises on immigration that never happen. Sure Obama delivered on DACA but that's basically it.

The result is you other-ize minority voting groups. When it's time to talk about issues that impact most people, like small businesses or healthcare, they trot out to the white folks. But if there's some niche racial issue that's all the blacks and browns are good for. Some promises and then you move on. Clearly Hispanics have heard enough and got other shyt they want to focus on as well. Hell a lot of second and third generation Hispanics look at illegal immigration the same way racist cacs do. They hate that shyt.
This poll didn’t define which Hispanics they interviewed. There’s a difference between Puerto Rico and Mexico, etc
 

Scustin Bieburr

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People on the Coli always say black people diversify their vote in order to force concessions from democrats but I feel like this is a perfect example that democrats aren't changing shyt. Hispanics are one of the most diverse voting groups in the country yet the democrat reaction has been the same since 2008: promises on immigration that never happen. Sure Obama delivered on DACA but that's basically it.

The result is you other-ize minority voting groups. When it's time to talk about issues that impact most people, like small businesses or healthcare, they trot out to the white folks. But if there's some niche racial issue that's all the blacks and browns are good for. Some promises and then you move on. Clearly Hispanics have heard enough and got other shyt they want to focus on as well. Hell a lot of second and third generation Hispanics look at illegal immigration the same way racist cacs do. They hate that shyt.
Policy for business owners and people making over 80k

Culture war and virtue signaling bullshyt for us. I don't care if you own Kente cloth, what is the federal policy for American citizens who are killed by law enforcement?

I don't care that you know how to do the latest tik tok dance. What are you going to do to make access to quality education more possible and what are the timelines and community organizations yall meeting with.

I don't care that you're 'disgusted' by racism. What are you going to do to build black wealth and make up for the things like the new bill and GI bill that you refused to extend to us.

What will they do to improve the material conditions of black people right now? This is why people aren't voting. They'd rather spend their time dealing with people in their community that can give them relief right now.
 

George's Dilemma

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I'd like to see a further breakdown of the numbers considering the diversity underneath the Hispanic umbrella. I know how Florida Cubans are voting, but how are Puerto Ricans and Dominicans voting in NY? Or how are California Mexicans voting, and if there's a noticeable split depending on where in California? Such as Orange County Mexicans vs San Jose?
 
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