Black and Latino voters show solidarity
Hot Topics TalkLifestyle / Hot Topics Talk 4 months ago 22 Views 0 comments
By Efrén Pérez, University of California, Los Angeles
Voters of color wait in line to cast their ballots in Atlanta in 2022. Alex Wong/Getty Images
Shortly before Kamala Harris replaced Joe Biden as the Democratic Party’s 2024 presidential candidate, several national polls and primary voting results indicated that Donald Trump had peeled away one of the party’s most reliable voting blocs – people of color.
Such was the case with polls suggesting that Trump was expected to win more Black votes than any other GOP candidate in modern history. Other polls suggested that more Hispanic voters were supporting Trump despite his anti-immigration policies and often racist rhetoric.
Each of these apparent political shifts came at a time during the Democratic primaries when President Biden was losing the support of Arab American voters – another reliably Democratic political bloc.
Though the candidacy of Harris has excited Democratic voters across the nation, she is still not immune to the effects of Trump’s appeal to voters of color. An August 2024 Pew Research Center poll found that 77% of all Black voters supported Harris, while 13% supported Trump.
Among Black voters under 50, Harris still led with 68% support – but 19% supported...
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