Exit Poll Analysis Suggests Obama Victory Due to Surge in Youth and Minority Voting

by: project vote

Wed Nov 26, 2008 at 16:43


(In confluence with Chris's thesis about the growing demographic Democratic base, here's the latest from Project Vote. - promoted by Paul Rosenberg)

The United States saw dramatic increases in voting from traditionally underrepresented groups, including minorities and young voters, according to a new analysis released this week by Project Vote. If borne out by systematic analysis of the voter rolls, this change in the electorate is evidence of the power of successful voter registration drives and an indication of the strong inclination of voters to participate in the process when candidates address their issues.
project vote :: Exit Poll Analysis Suggests Obama Victory Due to Surge in Youth and Minority Voting
Countering the conventional wisdom that the voting population on November 4 did not change as dramatically as predicted, the analysis, The Demographics of Voters in America's 2008 General Election: A Preliminary Assessment, demonstrates that African-Americans, Latinos, and young voters cast millions more ballots in 2008 than in 2004.

"The analysis estimated that about 5.8 million more minorities voted in this year's presidential election than in 2004, while nearly 1.2 million fewer whites went to the polls," wrote Greg Gordon of McClatchy Newspapers. "The figures appear to reflect the success of Project Vote and other liberal voter registration groups in registering millions of young, poor, elderly and minority Americans to vote in recent election cycles."

According to the analysis, African-Americans cast nearly three million more ballots nationwide in 2008 than in 2004-an increase of 21 percent. The total votes cast by Latinos went up by 16 percent-more than 1.5 million-and young Americans aged 18-29 cast 1.8 million more votes, a nine percent increase.  That the overall totals did not increase significantly compared to 2004 was in part due to a decrease in voting by white voters.

In addition to presenting an analysis of ballots cast from the United States as a whole, the memo by Project Vote consultant and Ph.D. candidate Jody Herman and Barnard College political science professor Lorraine Minnite examines several key states in detail, including Colorado, Florida, Missouri, New Mexico, Nevada, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.

The Project Vote data is preliminary, and does not speak to "turnout," which is traditionally a measure of the percentage of the voting-eligible population that shows up to vote. Project Vote expects to release a full report on turnout in the 2008 election in 2009 when government survey data on the voting-eligible population comes available. Yet, this preliminary analysis indicates that a significant shift occurred this year.

"There is no doubt that this surge in voting by Americans of color and young people had a powerful impact on the outcome of the election," said Michael Slater, executive director of Project Vote, in a press release issued today.

"Separate opinion polls and election results themselves indicate that an overwhelming majority of African-Americans and Latinos backed Obama," according to Gordon.

"Thus, the appearance of an African-American presidential candidate with a sympathetic message may have prompted the nation's minorities to vote at levels approaching white voters -- if final state vote counts do not upend Project Vote's figures," wrote AlterNet's Steve Rosenfeld last week. "Its findings also suggest the U.S. electorate is not an inflexible assembly of voting constituencies, but has segments that are mobilized -- or demobilized -- depending on the year, candidate and message,"

In an email exchange with Rosenfeld, Frank Sharry, executive director of pro-immigration reform group, America's Voice, said "neither the turnout increase among Latinos -- nor the swing in support to Democrats -- were surprising."

"Telling people you don't like them and don't want them is not a winning electoral strategy," wrote Sharry. "But that is what the Republican Party has been saying to immigrants, Latino immigrants in particular, for the past four years. No surprise, then, that record numbers of Latinos turned out in 2008 and that the swing away from Republicans to Democrats among Latino immigrants in particular was dramatic."


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Call me callous or morbid but I always crack a little smile every election cycle (0.00 / 0)
imagining all the bigots and rightwingers who must've died between then and the election before, ;)

Yes, a lot of people love family members who "vote the wrong way", but, looking at the big picture for the nation - and world - it's progress.  And I even say that about my own family members who voted against me til the bitter end, even though I loved them dearly.

The kiddies are gonna save the nation and this world!

For some reason, it seems that Obama has some pathological and deep-seated psychological need for Republicans to like him.  Seriously.  It's weird.


Could they hurry up please? ... (4.00 / 1)
...Some of us old pharts would like to at least live long enough to see the early fruits of that saving before we toddle off to the Great Beyond.

[ Parent ]
I always say the same thing. Like in Georgia, too bad they probably (0.00 / 0)
won't be there for Jim Martin.  Sucks, but getting the kiddies and first-time voters out in specials is worse than pulling teeth.  And you know this, Meteor Blades, being a political expert and your being a very high-profile member of the liberal netroots.

And 60 votes is so goddam important; and, ironically, more important for the kids as young voters, because the holdings that institutions like the Supreme Court make affect them longer.  Funny how that is, huh?

In law school, I chose to enroll in EVERY class available that had anything to do with the SCOTUS, from ConLaw I and II, to Election Law to Labor Law to Environmental Law....you name it.  And during class I was always thinking to myself:  how on Earth can these kiddies NOT vote when there's so much at stake and most civil liberties are NOT decided on an executive branch fiat or legislative majority imposing its will on the minority.  This is why my license plate has "14th Am" on it.  The Equal Protection Clause, Due Process Clause, and Incorporation Clause of that amendement, IMO, are the greatest political and legal words ever written in the history of mankind.  Pure poetry.  

If it weren't for Marbury (established judicial review), this country would be a far, far different place than it is today.  And, certainly, we would not be about to inaugurate a black president if that amendment had not been adopted.

So this took me about five minutes to write.  Shouldn't something so simple and succinct be taught BEFORE all children in the US graduate from high school?  Yet it's not.  One shouldn't have to go to law school to find out how important the SCOTUS is and, peripherally, 60 votes in the Senate (unless that fucking pussy Reid has the balls to eliminate the filibuster if the GOP tries to block UHC or liberal justices...just like that asshole Kyl has already threatened.

Sorry for the long reply.  :)

For some reason, it seems that Obama has some pathological and deep-seated psychological need for Republicans to like him.  Seriously.  It's weird.


[ Parent ]
Well...Check out these stats... (4.00 / 1)
Clearly Obama won the swing states (and even some deeply blue states) due to black and Latino votes.  Absent blacks and Latinos, he would have lost Virginia, North Carolina, Ohio, Indiana, Colorado, Maryland, New Jersey, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Florida. http://dissentingjustice.blogs...

Absent blacks and Latinos, he would have barely won his home state of Illinois.  

Why on earth do liberals want to supress this information?  An election is not a social movement.  And hyping an election will not transform it into one. As a black civil rights advocate I like to know my reality.


PS (0.00 / 0)
I remember when Latinos were voting for Clinton - the progressive chatter said they were racists....Funny how things are different now.  

[ Parent ]
Onje of the things this points to is listening to young people (0.00 / 0)
Listening to young people. Conversation with young people where young people are. One of the things that can said is "This is what we did wrong, this how you helped."

"We didn't do, think or try this and we should have. We thought this, but we were wrong and we're pretty damn happy you people are in on this."

Because I could say organize or educate, but you know what, 'from the bottom up' actually  means something. The repeated phrase of "the campaign helped, but we organized ourselves," means something. And unless we start with respect, this could end being a one time thing.

Lets continue to honor those that came before us, and respect the long long history of democrats, Democrats, progressives, leftists, socialists, liberals, unionists and radicals that helped bring us here, but lets commit to standing shoulder to shoulder in conversation with young people and all the other demographics (people) that brought us here.

(Ps. yes socialists, Bernie Sanders, who is not, as CNN calls him, an Independent, he is not a Democrat even, he is not the only member of the "Sanders for Vermont Party" in some  liebermanesque manner, he is a socialist. Like Debs.)

Change
"We must break up the banks and never again let them get so big that they distort our politics and take down the economy.


Let's hope this trend can be preserved! (0.00 / 0)
Because, let's face it, voting for incumbent president Obama in 2012 won't be as hip as voting for change. Would be sad if the new interest in politics by the younger generation were only a flash in the pan.

Let it be said by our children's children that when we were tested, we refused to let this journey end, that we did not turn back, nor did we falter

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