Sunday , November 24 2024
Home / Mike Norman Economics / Natasha Bach — One-Third of Eligible Voters in the U.S. Will be Non-White in 2020, Research Says

Natasha Bach — One-Third of Eligible Voters in the U.S. Will be Non-White in 2020, Research Says

Summary:
The US is facing the turning point that Israel just went through with the majority of the population non-Jewish. Will the US act in the same way as Israel? One-third of eligible voters will be non-white in 2020, according to new datafrom Pew Research Center. Latinos will be the largest minority group in the electorate, surpassing African-Americans for the first time. Pew projects that Latinos will account for around 32 million eligible voters, or 13% of the electorate, up from 7% in the 2000 election. There will be 30 million African-American voters, meanwhile, remaining at a constant share of about 12% since 2000. Asianswill also constitute a larger share of the voting population, reaching approximately 11 million--more than double the 5 million eligible in 2000. The increased share

Topics:
Mike Norman considers the following as important:

This could be interesting, too:

Mike Norman writes Jean Hopfensperger — Fastest Growing Religion Is ‘None’

Mike Norman writes Frank Jacobs — How to split the USA into two countries: Red and Blue

Mike Norman writes Stephen Johnson — Here’s how diverse the 116th Congress is set to become

Mike Norman writes Anatoly Karlin — Who’s Coming to the US?


The US is facing the turning point that Israel just went through with the majority of the population non-Jewish. Will the US act in the same way as Israel?
One-third of eligible voters will be non-white in 2020, according to new datafrom Pew Research Center.
Latinos will be the largest minority group in the electorate, surpassing African-Americans for the first time. Pew projects that Latinos will account for around 32 million eligible voters, or 13% of the electorate, up from 7% in the 2000 election. There will be 30 million African-American voters, meanwhile, remaining at a constant share of about 12% since 2000. Asianswill also constitute a larger share of the voting population, reaching approximately 11 million--more than double the 5 million eligible in 2000.
The increased share of minority voters is at least partially driven by immigration. One in 10 eligible voters in 2020 will have been born outside of the U.S., the highest share in at least 50 years.

The change is also hastened by Generation Z, many of whom will be voting for the first time in 2020. Generation Z, or those born after 1996, is the most ethnically diverse in American history--only 55% of the generation is white....
Fortune
One-Third of Eligible Voters in the U.S. Will be Non-White in 2020, Research Says
Natasha Bach
Mike Norman
Mike Norman is an economist and veteran trader whose career has spanned over 30 years on Wall Street. He is a former member and trader on the CME, NYMEX, COMEX and NYFE and he managed money for one of the largest hedge funds and ran a prop trading desk for Credit Suisse.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *