Press
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Growing
diversity in swing counties favors Obama
Monday, August 11, 2008
Minority Americans have been flocking to the nation's ''swing counties,''
hotly contested areas that could play a crucial role in this year's
election.
That's
got to be good news for Barack Obama, bidding to become the first
black president.
Blacks
and Hispanics are moving to counties that already were racially diverse,
such as Osceola in central Florida and Mecklenberg in North Carolina,
home to Charlotte. They also are moving to key counties that remain
predominantly white, such as Lake in Northeast Ohio, Lehigh in eastern
Pennsylvania and Oakland outside Detroit.
If
this year's election is as close as the past two, demographic shifts
in these counties could make a big difference.
The
racial changes reflect national trends: 93 percent of all counties
are less white than they were at the start of the decade, according
to new Census estimates. But the changes are even more profound in
swing counties of potential battleground states, counties that were
decided by razor thin margins in 2000 and 2004 and could decide statewide
winners this year.
''The
key this time is there are a fair number of battleground states that
are becoming more diverse, and maybe diverse enough to make a difference,''
said William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution, a Washington
think tank.
''The
diversity used to be mainly in pretty safe states, like Texas, California
and New York,'' he said.
The
Census Bureau last week released 2007 data on race, age and Hispanic
origin for all 3,141 counties in the nation. The Associated Press
used the data to analyze 129 key counties in 14 states expected to
be the most competitive in this year's presidential election. Each
county was decided by no more than 5 percentage points in the past
two elections, and each sits in a state that could go either way this
year.
The
analysis showed that from 2000 to 2007, minorities made up a growing
share of the population in all but 12 of the swing counties. The changes
happened among every age group, even seniors, though they were much
more pronounced among the young, including those too young to vote.
Obama,
who had a white mother and black father, overwhelmingly won the black
vote in the Democratic primaries, and he is polling more strongly
than Republican John McCain among Hispanics.
Both
candidates are targeting voters under 30. But while young voters have
increased their turnout in recent elections, they are still less likely
to vote than any other age group.
Obama
''may be generating excitement,'' said Vincent Hutchings, associate
professor of political science at the University of Michigan. ''But
is he generating enough enthusiasm to excite people who lack a formal
education and are disproportionately young, and not likely to vote?''
Hutchings
said the demographic changes could affect this year's election, but
he expects the impact to be greater in future elections as young minorities,
particularly the booming Hispanic population, become older and more
politically active.
The
Census numbers are based on estimates, and in some counties changes
in racial composition are small enough to be statistically insignificant.
But the trend is clear: The nation is becoming increasingly diverse,
even more so in areas that have been decisive the past two presidential
elections.
The
AP analysis looked at counties in Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indiana,
Iowa, Michigan, Missouri, North Carolina, New Hampshire, New Mexico,
Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin. Nevada also was analyzed
because it is a competitive state this year. None of the state's counties
met the criteria for swing counties in the previous two elections,
but each has become more diverse since the decade began.
Some
states are more competitive than others, and many of the counties
remained overwhelmingly white. But given the closeness of the past
two presidential elections, even small changes could make a difference
in competitive states.
For
example, Lake County, just northeast of Cleveland, is still 92 percent
white. But since the start of the decade, the number of Hispanics
has grown by 73 percent and the black population has increased by
47 percent. The number of whites has dropped slightly in a county
that President Bush narrowly won in 2000 and 2004.
Hillsborough
County, N.H., home to Manchester, is still 89 percent white. But the
number of Hispanics has grown by 57 percent and the number of blacks
has increased by 56 percent. The white population has increased by
just 2 percent in a county that Bush barely won twice.
The
nation's minority population has grown through higher birthrates and
immigration. As a result, the share of minorities increased between
2000 and 2007 in every state but Hawaii and the District of Columbia.
Nationally,
the white population grew by just 2 percent in that time, while the
number of blacks increased by 10 percent and the number of Hispanics
grew by 29 percent.
In
the swing counties examined by the AP, the black population grew by
an average of 18 percent and the number of Hispanics increased by
45 percent. The white population on average grew by less than a percent
in the 129 counties.
''In
many ways demographic differences are the raw material for party politics,''
said John Green, director of the University of Akron's Ray C. Bliss
Institute of Applied Politics.
''If
the election is close, it could come down to small demographic changes
in some areas.''
Source: Associated Press