Texas is lucky in that the Latinos there (a lot of Tejanos) tend to vote red (something like 40% of Latinos in Texas vote red), and this is one of the reasons Texas goes red in an election. Trump actually won quite a few 70%+ Hispanic border counties in 2020.
But that's not the problem - it's white voters. Georgia and Arizona went blue in 2020 not because of Latinos, but white voters. Trump collapsed with white suburban voters in those states even though he INCREASED his support with Hispanics.
Texas won't go blue in 2024, and maybe not 2028 but it will be a full on swing state then.
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01-01-2022, 07:05 AM #61Republicans are weak men who pretend to be strong
Democrats are strong men who pretend to be weak
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01-01-2022, 07:08 AM #62
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01-01-2022, 11:53 AM #63
President Trump shall win Florida for the third time, this time, at least five- plus percent. Florida is a solid red state now. DeSantis will win re-election by at at least 10 percent in November.
- Source, Richard Baris, the best pollster in the country
https://twitter.com/Peoples_Pundit
https://floridianpress.com/2021/12/d...-registration/
"Over the weekend, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) celebrated what he’s calling a “Historic win in the Sunshine State.” The Biden Administration and Democrats have struggled with Florida voters in recent weeks, and a number of polls have indicated that support for either has taken a hit both in the state and nationally.
As a result, Governor DeSantis informed supporters that “for the first time in the history of Florida, there are more registered Republicans than Democrats.”
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01-01-2022, 11:57 AM #64
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01-01-2022, 11:59 AM #65
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01-01-2022, 12:56 PM #66
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01-01-2022, 01:05 PM #67
Hispanics are not a monolithic voting group like Blacks and you're so-called 31 percent for GOP nominee is not backed by accounting data. Past data has no predictive power, if that was that was case, active management funds would beat passive index funds on the regular basis. Hispanics are trending R bigly, especially when you look at Texas counties that are majority Hispanics along the Rio Grande Valley, particularly the Hispanics working-class without four year college degrees.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/hispani...ds-11638972769
"Hispanic Voters Now Evenly Split Between Parties, WSJ Poll Finds
Republicans have made rapid gains among a crucial voting demographic that has long favored Democrats"Last edited by Dan3582; 01-01-2022 at 01:19 PM.
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