Poll Finds Blacks Motivated to Vote in November

Date: Tuesday, March 09, 2010, 5:54 am
By: Ben Evans, Associated Press

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African-American Democrats are eager to vote in November's election even without Barack Obama on the ballot.

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats facing strong headwinds this election season have at least one reason for optimism, according to polling that found the party's large African-American voting bloc eager to stay involved even without Barack Obama on the ballot.

About two-thirds of black adults in four states say they are closely following news about the upcoming midterm elections, and between 74 percent and 80 percent say they are very likely to vote, according to the poll, conducted by the nonpartisan Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. The organization surveyed 500 African-Americans in each state — Missouri, Indiana, Arkansas and South Carolina — all of which have Senate races in November.

How many of those voters follow through with their intentions will help determine if Democrats hold control of Congress. In many competitive congressional districts, blacks make up a quarter of the electorate, and they vote overwhelmingly for Democrats. Their surge during Obama's 2008 victory is widely credited with helping sweep many down-ballot Democrats into office who might have otherwise lost.

David Bositis, a researcher at the institute who directed the poll, said turnout will surely be lower than the poll's findings. But he said the numbers suggest continued enthusiasm.

"I think the Obama election and the fact that there is an African-American president is something of a game-changer," he said. "African-Americans feel like they have a real investment in President Obama ... I think it's a major motivating factor."

The poll found that the economy and health care reform are the top two issues on black voters' minds heading into the midterm election.

Andra Gillespie, a political scientist at Emory University who specializes in African-American politics, voiced skepticism about the turnout figures and said it's too early to know just what voters will do.

"One of the things you have to realize with polls is that if you ask people if they're going to vote, people can misrepresent themselves," she said. "Nobody wants to look like a civic deadbeat."

She noted that overall turnout usually hovers around 40 percent of eligible voters in midterm elections. In the 2008 election, 62 percent of eligible voters cast ballots, the highest turnout in 40 years.

"Apart from mobilization happening, these aren't the types of elections that get people out to vote the way you would expect them to," Gillespie said.

The poll, which has a margin of error of four percentage points, was conducted last year between November 11 and December 1.


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As a race, we refuse to learn from history and continue to push for black candidates even when we know in our hearts that it's just a matter of time fore' they become the next Sheila Dixon or worse. We all look bad in other races viewpoint....and we should. DAMM shyot pisses me off. But I digress...my Homie. My advice to you Fj is not to drink of the BAW Kool-Aid, follow what you know is right......and vote whyte.
There I said it...let the haters come forth....but the Scholar will stand above them all.


by   
Jiggy5
March 10, 2010, 12:59 pm
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Fj, my brother from another mother, you pose a valid quandry for our peeps. Do we follow instinct and vote for race, cause "it's a black thang" or select the most qualified candidate who may not look like us. Recent histroy is replete with AA political failures because they knew they could dupe the black vote. Kwame "da playa playa" Kilpatrick and Marion "da byotch set me up" Barry come immediately to mind. ..continued...


by   
Jiggy5
March 10, 2010, 12:59 pm
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wuddup J, say, schola, what are the relative merits of the implications that we, the African American community is, or is not, duly and dutifully motivated to exercise our 14th amendment rights in the form of proudly stuffing as many ballots of the American electoral system as is practicable such that we can affect our choice in the division of scarce resources of the representative government of this republic?


by   
Fj1200
March 10, 2010, 10:45 am
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Sup my peeps? Holla at the scholar. The J-man is in da house.


by   
Jiggy5
March 10, 2010, 9:38 am
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To a great extent that is EXACTLY what will happen this election Ann38.


by   
Fj1200
March 9, 2010, 3:30 pm
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