Hispanic Battleground States Crucial for Electoral College Votes in 2012
RENTON, WA & SANTA FE, NM (By Matt Barreto, Latino Decisions) January 25, 2010 In the 2008 presidential election, Barack Obama won the important Latino battleground states of Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado and Florida on his way to winning 365 total electoral college votes.
The 46 electors in those four key states back in 2008 were part of the coalition, but in the ended they served more to run up the score, than provide the margin of victory. In 2012, due to declining approval of Obama among Whites, and a change in the number of electoral college votes during reapportionment, Latino voters, and Latino influence states are likely to play a very crucial role in determining which candidate gets to 270 electors.
The four Latino battleground states
have gained 3 seats in the U.S.
House, resulting in 3 additional
electoral college votes 1 in
Nevada and 2 in Florida. While Obama
carried all four of these Latino
states in 2008, the other states he
won saw a loss of 9 electoral
college votes in reapportionment,
for a net loss of 6.
The most likely pick-ups for the
Republicans in 2012 are North
Carolina, Virginia, Indiana, Ohio,
and the 2nd House district in
Nebraska that amounts to a total
of 58 electoral college votes,
dropping Obama to perhaps 301
electors, to 237 for the Republican
opponent, under the new electoral
vote state totals following the 2010
Census numbers.
Indeed, if Obama has only 301 votes
leaning towards his column in 2012
these 49 Latino-influence electoral
votes are absolutely crucial
without which hed be left with just
252 votes. Can he win Ohio in 2012?
Maybe. But is he willing to risk
re-election on the Buckeye state, or
is there more of an opportunity for
him in Latino-influence states? |
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