Hispanic Votes in Presidential Election Analyzed
The
Houston Chronicle reported last week that the number of Hispanic votes
received by Bush in the November 2 election increased to about 44 percent.
Polls
showed that when voters decide which presidential candidate to vote for, record
numbers favored Bush when deciding on terms of the candidate’s religious
beliefs, morals and values and national security strategy.
It was only when one’s vote was decided on economic grounds that the
Hispanic vote fell towards Kerry, The
Washington Post reported on November 8.
Furthermore,
exit polls looked even more favorable among Hispanic voters in some states where
percentages jumped even higher than the national percentages.
In Texas, the number of Hispanics voting for the republican candidate
rose from 16 percent to 59 percent of Hispanics in the state.
Other states that voted Republican were Florida and New Mexico, states in
which large Hispanic populations defeated the traditional Democrat vote with the
close margin of around 55 percent votes for Bush.
However,
critics of the impressive new numbers say that exit poll numbers are calculated
to make them appear more extraordinary than they actually are.
A Latino organization, the Willie C. Velázquez Institute, claims that
media polling designed to survey the general public gives inaccurate results,
because most Hispanics live in urban areas compared to the rural and suburban
areas that are included in the survey. The
organization further reported that these polls accounted for around 10 million
Hispanic voters while only 7 million are registered voters.
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