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Voter turnout ‘explodes’ among blacks, Hispanics in US

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Voter turnout among African American and Hispanic voters in the United States has surged in early voting, and this swell of minority participation could spell trouble for Donald Trump's White House hopes.

On Sunday -- the last day of early voting before Election Day on November 8 -- hundreds of people attended "Souls to the Polls" events, aimed at encouraging churchgoers to vote across the key swing state of Florida.

Some came straight from morning worship, wearing three-piece suits and dresses as they made their way past dozens of campaigners hoisting signs for local candidates and urging support for solar energy and education issues.

At one event in central Miami, people held hands and prayed outside an early voting site, while at another in southern Miami-Dade County, about 20 African American men rolled in together on motorcycles.

For some, the vote they cast was as much for Democrat Hillary Clinton as it was against her Republican billionaire challenger.

"I'm scared if Trump wins," said Ines Curbelo, 57, a nurse who described herself as Afro-Cuban and was handing out Democratic flyers at a polling place Cutler Bay, south of Miami.

Hispanics make up a powerful voting bloc in the battleground state of Florida  and are widely expect...
Hispanics make up a powerful voting bloc in the battleground state of Florida, and are widely expected to lean toward Hillary Clinton, particularly since Donald Trump has described Mexicans as rapists
Brendan Smialowski, AFP

As speakers blared gospel and R&B music, a line formed near a smoky barbecue pit and several young boys jousted with inflatable swords on the grassy lawn behind her.

"He would set back politics and set back race relations and set back women's fight for equality in the workplace -- everything is going to get set so far back," Curbelo said.

- 100% increase in Hispanic voters -

Hispanics make up a powerful voting bloc in the battleground state of Florida, and are widely expected to lean toward Clinton, particularly since Trump has described Mexicans as rapists, repeatedly vowed to build a border wall and promised to deport masses of undocumented immigrants.

As of early Monday, nearly one million of the state's total 6.4 million votes so far were cast by Hispanics, according to Daniel Smith, a University of Florida professor who tracks voter turnout.

Among those who showed up in person rather than mailing in a ballot, there was a 100 percent increase over the close of early voting in 2012, he said.

In another sign of voter enthusiasm, 36 percent of Hispanics who cast a ballot this year did not vote in the last presidential election.

As of Saturday  565 000 Hispanics had already voted in person in Florida  a 100 percent increase ove...
As of Saturday, 565,000 Hispanics had already voted in person in Florida, a 100 percent increase over the close of early voting in 2012
Rhona Wise, AFP

Nationwide, about 12 percent of voters are Hispanic, or about 27.3 million people, according to Pew Research Center projections.

High Hispanic turnout has also been seen in other states such as Nevada.

"The Hispanic community is coming out," teacher Marcela Stewart, 37, told AFP at the Souls to the Polls event.

"I think as far as the black community, we need to work a little harder," she added.

"Some people are just discouraged and feel they cannot impact the election, so we want to let them know that their voices will be heard and they need to come out."

- Black turnout 'explodes' -

Indeed, when early voting in the United States started two weeks ago, African American turnout was low.

According to Tornell Jenkins, a 37-year-old student, President Barack Obama's historic victory as the first black president in 2008 "really drove the black vote."

"Now there is confusion. Some blacks feel that both parties are bad," he added, predicting that many in his community would wait for Election Day to vote.

Early last week, Smith said black turnout was "lackluster" -- at about 14 percent of early voters -- compared with 26 percent in 2012, when Obama was re-elected.

But that changed, after Obama made a series of appeals for black voters to support Clinton, and Clinton herself appeared at a campaign event with Beyonce and Jay-Z.

"Over the past few days, we've seen black turnout explode, with more African-Americans voting early in-person than in 2012," Smith told AFP on Sunday.

As of Monday, a total of 835,000 African Americans had already voted in Florida. That is higher than in 2012, when 764,000 blacks voted early.

Mixing religion and politics on the last Sunday of early voting can be an important draw for the working class, according to Namita Waghray, an organizer with the American County of Federal, State and County Employees (AFSCME), a 1.6 million-member union that includes bus drivers and garbage collectors.

"In African American communities, this is when people vote," she said, recalling about 800 people came out for Souls to the Polls events in 2012 and a dozen were held statewide this year.

"The reason we partner with churches and people of faith is because they have such belief in their community."

Voter turnout among African American and Hispanic voters in the United States has surged in early voting, and this swell of minority participation could spell trouble for Donald Trump’s White House hopes.

On Sunday — the last day of early voting before Election Day on November 8 — hundreds of people attended “Souls to the Polls” events, aimed at encouraging churchgoers to vote across the key swing state of Florida.

Some came straight from morning worship, wearing three-piece suits and dresses as they made their way past dozens of campaigners hoisting signs for local candidates and urging support for solar energy and education issues.

At one event in central Miami, people held hands and prayed outside an early voting site, while at another in southern Miami-Dade County, about 20 African American men rolled in together on motorcycles.

For some, the vote they cast was as much for Democrat Hillary Clinton as it was against her Republican billionaire challenger.

“I’m scared if Trump wins,” said Ines Curbelo, 57, a nurse who described herself as Afro-Cuban and was handing out Democratic flyers at a polling place Cutler Bay, south of Miami.

Hispanics make up a powerful voting bloc in the battleground state of Florida  and are widely expect...

Hispanics make up a powerful voting bloc in the battleground state of Florida, and are widely expected to lean toward Hillary Clinton, particularly since Donald Trump has described Mexicans as rapists
Brendan Smialowski, AFP

As speakers blared gospel and R&B music, a line formed near a smoky barbecue pit and several young boys jousted with inflatable swords on the grassy lawn behind her.

“He would set back politics and set back race relations and set back women’s fight for equality in the workplace — everything is going to get set so far back,” Curbelo said.

– 100% increase in Hispanic voters –

Hispanics make up a powerful voting bloc in the battleground state of Florida, and are widely expected to lean toward Clinton, particularly since Trump has described Mexicans as rapists, repeatedly vowed to build a border wall and promised to deport masses of undocumented immigrants.

As of early Monday, nearly one million of the state’s total 6.4 million votes so far were cast by Hispanics, according to Daniel Smith, a University of Florida professor who tracks voter turnout.

Among those who showed up in person rather than mailing in a ballot, there was a 100 percent increase over the close of early voting in 2012, he said.

In another sign of voter enthusiasm, 36 percent of Hispanics who cast a ballot this year did not vote in the last presidential election.

As of Saturday  565 000 Hispanics had already voted in person in Florida  a 100 percent increase ove...

As of Saturday, 565,000 Hispanics had already voted in person in Florida, a 100 percent increase over the close of early voting in 2012
Rhona Wise, AFP

Nationwide, about 12 percent of voters are Hispanic, or about 27.3 million people, according to Pew Research Center projections.

High Hispanic turnout has also been seen in other states such as Nevada.

“The Hispanic community is coming out,” teacher Marcela Stewart, 37, told AFP at the Souls to the Polls event.

“I think as far as the black community, we need to work a little harder,” she added.

“Some people are just discouraged and feel they cannot impact the election, so we want to let them know that their voices will be heard and they need to come out.”

– Black turnout ‘explodes’ –

Indeed, when early voting in the United States started two weeks ago, African American turnout was low.

According to Tornell Jenkins, a 37-year-old student, President Barack Obama’s historic victory as the first black president in 2008 “really drove the black vote.”

“Now there is confusion. Some blacks feel that both parties are bad,” he added, predicting that many in his community would wait for Election Day to vote.

Early last week, Smith said black turnout was “lackluster” — at about 14 percent of early voters — compared with 26 percent in 2012, when Obama was re-elected.

But that changed, after Obama made a series of appeals for black voters to support Clinton, and Clinton herself appeared at a campaign event with Beyonce and Jay-Z.

“Over the past few days, we’ve seen black turnout explode, with more African-Americans voting early in-person than in 2012,” Smith told AFP on Sunday.

As of Monday, a total of 835,000 African Americans had already voted in Florida. That is higher than in 2012, when 764,000 blacks voted early.

Mixing religion and politics on the last Sunday of early voting can be an important draw for the working class, according to Namita Waghray, an organizer with the American County of Federal, State and County Employees (AFSCME), a 1.6 million-member union that includes bus drivers and garbage collectors.

“In African American communities, this is when people vote,” she said, recalling about 800 people came out for Souls to the Polls events in 2012 and a dozen were held statewide this year.

“The reason we partner with churches and people of faith is because they have such belief in their community.”

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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