BDKJMU wrote:Ibanez wrote:Go back and read what you wrote. You said Hispanics were white. That's wrong.
Hispanics can be white.
Ok, I was incorrect in that I should have inserted "majority".
But the exit polling is wrong in listing Latino under race, and listing 100% of them as non white.
Fine, but whatever they are they tend to vote Democrat and it's been like that since the beginning of exit polling. And the trend in Texas is clear. I couldn't find any 2012 exit polling data for Texas. But for other years:
The 2004 Texas exit poll report has 66% of those who voted in the State as White and 35% as non White (rounding resulted in a 101% total). The non Whites voted for Kerry over Bush by 62% to 38%. Bush actually did very well among the "Latino" component of non Whites. Pretty much a dead heat at 49% to 50%.
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/pages/ ... lls.0.html
The 2008 exit poll report has 63% of Texas voters as White and 37% as non White. The non Whites voted for Obama over McCain by 78% to 22%.
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/results/polls/#TXP00p1
The 2016 exit poll report has 57% of Texas voters as White and 43% as non White. The non Whites voted for Clinton over Trump by 69% to 27%.
https://www.cnn.com/election/2016/resul ... /president
I suppose Republicans can take comfort in Trump doing better than Romney did among non Whites in the State. But Romney was running against the charismatic non White guy. But the important trend is that the percent of Texas voters who are White has been declining at a rate of 3 percentage points per election and if that continues Whites will drop below 50% three Presidential elections. At that rate, within the next four Presidential elections, the situation will be essentially reversed with non Whites being 55% of the vote and Whites being 45%. At that point, unless something changes very dramatically with how non Whites generally vote, Texas is lost to the Republicans.
And that's not even considering what's going on with age. As I've written before, I think the perception that people change dramatically as they get older is exaggerated. And Clinton almost certainly won in 2016 among Texas voters that were 44 years old and younger. The exit polling estimate is 49% to 43%. It's another indication that, in Texas as well as throughout the country, the Republican Party is the Party of old, White voters. The handwriting continues to be on the wall.