Share.

39 Comments

  1. JustGottaKeepTrying on

    Am I reading the Hispanic men properly? Quick look says they were the biggest movers towards trump?

  2. RuggerJibberJabber on

    It’s insane to see groups he openly despises and wants to destroy voting for him. Like the old saying: turkeys voting for xmas

  3. Hispanics now behave (electorally) like whites, if this continues to hold, they would probably become like italians, lumped with whites in future elections and censuses

    its not just in voting patterns but in marriage patterns too as almost half of all “interracial” marriages are white/hispanic

    it wouldnt be the first or the second time that a catholic group of inmigrants from a western culture become white when their behavior becomes similar enough to the rest of the white population

  4. This is sorted backwards. Given the correlations, the groups should be “white men,” “white women,” etc., with subgroups by age. That would make the data look less chaotic and make the changes pop more

  5. I really hate this kind of discussions because it completely overlooks differences in turnout and can give you a totally misleading picture.

    If I have 100 people that vote, 40 for Trump and 60 for Biden, Trump’s share is 40%. If now I have a candidate deeply unpopular and you suddenly have 40 that vote for Trump and 50 for Harris, then Trump’s share increases to 44% despite having the exact same number of people voting for him. Support for him didn’t increase, but support for his opponent collapsed. Trump won 30.9% of the electorate in 2020 and only made a minor improvement to 31.6% in 2024. The Dems went from 33.8% to 30.7%.

    It would be more meaningful to see a change in absolute numbers or as a percentage of the total electorate and not just the voters. It would make sense to me that different ethnicities had different turnout numbers.

  6. SmarterThanCornPop on

    It will never not be funny that democrats spent the entire time obsessing over white men for Trump and then lost ground with every other demographic.

  7. panplemoussenuclear on

    As a Hispanic gay man this jibes with the homophobia, anti woke sentiment I experience from my family and their community.

  8. thesixfingerman on

    This makes it look like his recent win was due almost entirely to Hispanics.

  9. Technologytwitt on

    The answer is, there’s still a vast majority of people who vote based on a policy or a position rather than the person (their morals, ethics, character, etc). Couldn’t be more evident in Tonald Dump’s case, most of the followers are for whatever he says rather than the man himself.

    How people Vote:
    First for candidates statements & claims (whether it’s a lie or not, it’s whatever they want to hear)
    Second for Party
    Third out of frustration from existing Administration (could also be 1st in some cases)
    Fourth for whoever their (friends, etc) vote for

  10. Outrageous_Match2619 on

    Trump: “I’m going to deport Hispanics.”

    Hispanics: “I like that guy.”

  11. Interesting. Across the board Hispanic men and women support for Trump went up. What lies did he tell them? How was the propaganda deliver that made them fall for it? How do they feel about it now? Are they happy with lack of due process and detention? Just curious so I know how much to care.

  12. I live near a lot of Hispanics. Another reason they flipped to trump was immigration. Sounds a little odd but a lot of these families have been here for multiple generations and don’t like getting lumped in with the immigrants freshly migrating in.

  13. Abhimanyu_Uchiha on

    The hispanic community is largely made of devout catholics, I can see why team red would appeal to them

  14. dinklberg1990 on

    Man the Latino vote literally is pulling the ladder up with them, and it won’t even help that’s wild.

  15. Man the democrats have really lost the American people. So embarrassing for them. Hopefully they can make some much needed adjustments to give themselves a better chance in the next election

  16. Well on the bright side thanks to Trumps policies there won’t be as many Hispanic voters left /s

  17. OK but *why* are hispanics massively more supportive of Trump in 2024 than they were in 2020?

    Or was there some reason for them to vote “anyone but Harris” and Trump just happened to be the other party’s nominee?

  18. Black Men are an interesting demographic in this graph, why would he gain support from under 30s and over 45s but lose support from 30-44?

  19. JillScottydoesntknow on

    I do love that no matter how you look at this, most black woman of all the ages listed were overwhelmingly like “nah, absolutely not. We don’t like this man”

  20. Why Asians are not in this data? South and Southeast Asian Americans are massively pro Trump too. Lol

  21. therequiembellishere on

    Segmented charts like this should also have figures for roughly how much of the electorate (both in millions and as a percent of the whole, and their comparative sizes between 2020 and 2024) each segment represents. Gives a better picture of the impact of these swings.

  22. Interesting shift in support! I think it’s a mix of both traditional factors like the economy and social issues, but also the cultural and generational divides playing a big role. A lot of Hispanic voters seem to be feelin more aligned with Trump on issues like the economy and religious values, as mentioned. But it’s def a complex pic—just when you think you have a clear explanation, you realize how many different factors are at play across such a diverse group.

  23. So the biggest movers are Hispanic men?

    Change democratic platform policy accordingly?

    I don’t La-tinx-o

  24. Amazing that the Mexicans he wants so badly to build a wall to keep out decided he was their guy

  25. There should be a really big caveat here. Exit polls are not designed for this sort of analysis, their intended use is to help call the results on election day. This sort of demographic use is interesting, and for considerable time after the election, this is the only data set like it, however flawed the data is. But using it this way is error prone and prone to heavy overweigthing of small changes and random noise.

  26. Supposedly… which one is the 2020 data? The blue or the yellow? maybe im dumb

  27. Something going on in the Hispanic men and women demos huh?…… that’s working out great….

  28. Any chance that this might be the easiest target demographic for electoral fraud? Hard to imagine that so many people would change their view of him 4 years later, especially when they risk deportation. Wry hard to make sense out of how there view of him could change so positively. Don’t want to be a conspiracy theorist, just very hard to rationalize.

  29. My read is that I democratically shoe-horning Harris into the nomination cost Dems the election. Hispanic men and some Hispanic women didn’t sign on to that idea.

    I don’t believe there was some major increase in Trump’s popularity.

  30. Hispanic men were very foolish for supporting Trump, it comes from inflation and nostalgia about lower prices before Covid.

  31. Blows up the “BIPOC Theory” that has been a cornerstone of democratic politics since at least the Obama years. This holds that non-white people will always see themselves as having a common cause together and therefore will always vote against Republicans. Same with women. As we see here from these results, not so much. It turns out race is much more nuanced than that.