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Pew Research CenterOctober 10, 2016
Democrats Maintain Edge as Party ‘More Concerned’ for Latinos, but Views Similar to 2012

Two-thirds of Hispanic voters have thought ‘quite a lot’ about the election

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Two-thirds of Hispanic voters have thought ‘quite a lot’ about the election

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Democrats Maintain Edge as Party ‘More Concerned’ for Latinos, but Views Similar to 2012
By a wide margin, Latino voters continue to view Democratic Party as ‘more concerned’ for Latinos than GOP
Clinton holds wide lead over Trump among various Hispanic groups
Slight decline in share of Latinos ‘absolutely certain’ to vote
Party affiliation among Latino voters has remained little changed
Share of those in Latino demographic subgroups who are ‘absolutely certain’ they will vote in 2016
Smaller share of Hispanic voters say they will vote
One-in-five Latino voters will be voting for the first time this November
Two-thirds of Hispanic voters have thought ‘quite a lot’ about the election
Clinton holds a wide lead across most subgroups of Hispanic voters
Demographics of candidates’ supporters in 2016
Many Hispanic voters who back Clinton say they are voting against Trump
Majorities of Hispanic voters have talked about Trump in the past year
More than half of Latino voters dissatisfied with the nation’s direction
Education and the economy top issues for Latino voters in 2016 election
Top issues among Latinos in 2016
Image of Democratic Party improves over the past decade among Latino registered voters
Two-thirds of Hispanic voters identify with or lean toward the Democratic Party
Latino voters’ party affiliation by group
Older and foreign-born Latino voters are more conservative in their political views

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