by Roberto Suro, Richard Fry and Jeffrey Passel
Hispanics accounted for half of the population growth in the United States between the elections of 2000 and 2004 but only one-tenth of the increase in the total votes cast, according to a Pew Hispanic Center analysis of new data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
This gap between the very substantial growth of the Hispanic population and much more modest growth in Hispanic electoral clout has been developing for a generation but has widened considerably in recent years.
It is primarily the result of the two key demographic factors that distinguish Latinos from whites and blacks in the electoral arena: a high percentage of Hispanics are either too young to vote or are ineligible because they are not citizens.
As a result, a population increase of 5.7 million Latinos between 2000 and 2004 yielded only 2.1 million new eligible voters. In addition, Hispanic voter participation rates lag those of whites or blacks so that the number of Hispanic voters increased by just 1.4 million.
The combination of demographic factors and participation rates meant that 18 percent of the total Latino population (adults as well as children, citizens and non-citizens) went to the polls in 2004, compared with 51 percent of all whites and 39 percent of all blacks.
Despite these factors, however, the Hispanic population has been growing at such a strong rate that it still has led to an increase--albeit a small one--in the Hispanic share of the overall electorate. In November, 2004, Hispanics accounted for 6.0% of all votes cast, up from 5.5% four years earlier. During this same period, the Hispanic share of the population rose from 12.8% in 2000 to 14.3% in 2004.
Latino Power? It Will Take Time for the Population Boom to Translate, by Roberto Suro (Washington Post Sunday Outlook, June 26, 2005)
Dissecting the 2008 Electorate: Most Diverse in U.S. History
Hispanics and the New Administration
Immigration Slips as a Top Priority
The Hispanic Vote in the 2008 Election
Hispanics and Arizona’s New Immigration Law
Among Hispanics in Florida, 2008 Voter Registration Rolls Swing Democratic