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<blockquote data-quote="MAKAVELI" data-source="post: 2465874" data-attributes="member: 43825"><p>I think 18% is more realistic.</p><p><a href="https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/amphtml/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/11/11/in-record-numbers-latinos-voted-overwhelmingly-against-trump-we-did-the-research/" target="_blank">In record numbers, Latinos voted overwhelmingly against Trump. We did the research.</a></p><p>What can we learn about the 2016 election from the Latino Decisions Election Eve Poll (about which more below)? Two things stand out. On Nov. 8, Latino turnout was up significantly compared with 2012. And Latinos gave a substantial share of their votes — we estimate 79 percent — to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.</p><p></p><p>Related: Five key lessons from Donald Trump’s surprising victory</p><p></p><p>That’s what we know from our poll, combined with some of our pre-election surveys. The national exit surveys’ deeply flawed methodology distorts the Latino vote. Even the exits, however, find that the Latino electorate gave a supermajority of its vote to Clinton. Figuring in the increase in Latino voters, Donald Trump received only 18 percent of the Latino vote, the lowest level on record for any presidential candidate.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MAKAVELI, post: 2465874, member: 43825"] I think 18% is more realistic. [URL="https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/amphtml/news/monkey-cage/wp/2016/11/11/in-record-numbers-latinos-voted-overwhelmingly-against-trump-we-did-the-research/"]In record numbers, Latinos voted overwhelmingly against Trump. We did the research.[/URL] What can we learn about the 2016 election from the Latino Decisions Election Eve Poll (about which more below)? Two things stand out. On Nov. 8, Latino turnout was up significantly compared with 2012. And Latinos gave a substantial share of their votes — we estimate 79 percent — to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Related: Five key lessons from Donald Trump’s surprising victory That’s what we know from our poll, combined with some of our pre-election surveys. The national exit surveys’ deeply flawed methodology distorts the Latino vote. Even the exits, however, find that the Latino electorate gave a supermajority of its vote to Clinton. Figuring in the increase in Latino voters, Donald Trump received only 18 percent of the Latino vote, the lowest level on record for any presidential candidate. [/QUOTE]
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