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Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
greets supporters after defeating Sharron Angle. |
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Harry Reid greets Hispanic
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Hispanics Save Harry Reid
Polling shows Latinos voted for the
Senate majority leader by a wide
margin.
SANTA FE, NM
(By Arian Campo-Flores,
Newsweek)
November 10, 2010
—
In the wake of Sen. Harry
Reid’s hard-fought victory against
Sharron Angle in Nevada, the
postgame analysis has revved into
high gear.
How to explain his win?
Was it his massive, finely tuned
ground operation? Was it his success
in painting his opponent as an
extremist? Was it Angle’s unique
talent for committing a gaffe
practically every time she opened
her mouth? Arguably, all these
things played a role.
But one factor in particular appears
to have been key: the Hispanic vote.
According to election-eve polling
and analysis by Latino Decisions, a
surveying firm, Hispanics chose Reid
over Angle 90 percent to 8 percent —
an astounding margin. CNN’s exit
polls showed a significantly smaller
spread, with Reid winning 68 percent
to Angle’s 30 percent.
But Latino Decisions argues
exit-polling methodology is
typically inaccurate at measuring
voting by Hispanics and other
subgroups. The firm also contends
exit polls tend to lowball Hispanic
turnout. Still, CNN’s figures show
Hispanics constituted 15 percent of
the Nevada electorate this year, a
notable increase over the last
midterm cycle, in 2006, when they
made up 12 percent. “Hispanics
certainly saved Harry Reid,” says
Gary Segura, a member of Latino
Decisions and a professor at
Stanford University.
Hispanics’ resounding rejection of
Angle should come as no surprise.
Her harsh ads depicting undocumented
immigrants as shady gangbangers and
calling Reid “the best friend
illegal aliens ever had” infuriated
Hispanics in Nevada and beyond. And
her remark before a group of
Hispanic school kids some of them
“look Asian” invited heaps of
ridicule. Yet her campaign evidently
made a calculus: alienating Hispanic
voters mattered less than
galvanizing conservative,
get-tough-on-the-border whites.
That may have been a critical
misstep.
Hispanic organizations are now
touting these results, and others,
as evidence Hispanics “helped save
the Senate for Democrats,” as Frank
Sharry, head of the pro-immigrant
group America’s Voice, puts it.
Drawing on the Latino Decisions
data, they point to Barbara Boxer’s
86–14 percent margin among Hispanics
against Carly Fiorina in the
California Senate contest, or
Michael Bennet’s 81–19 percent
margin against Ken Buck in the
Colorado Senate race. Moreover, they
highlight exit polling shows
Hispanics made up growing shares of
the electorate in almost every state
that had such data available.
Yet to argue these outcomes actually
“helped save the Senate” may be
overstating things. There’s still a
lot of number-crunching to be done.
One thing that’s still not clear is
whether Hispanic turnout rates
increased.It’s hardly surprising
Hispanics would make up a larger
share of the electorate, given their
population continues to boom. It
would be quite a bit more
significant, though, if there was an
uptick in the percentage of Hispanic
registered voters who cast ballots.
That would bolster the argument,
made by many advocates, Hispanics
are sufficiently engaged and wield
enough electoral muscle to punish
candidates who offend them with
divisive rhetoric.
One thing is clear: Hispanic
disenchantment with Republicans
continues to run deep. The Latino
Decisions analysis found Hispanics
sided with Democrats over
Republicans by 76 percent to 24
percent. Amid all the GOP
high-fiving, that should be a
sobering data point for Republicans
— and an encouraging one for
otherwise despondent Democrats.