Sentences with phrase «black turnout»

Underappreciated fact: Crist is still extremely popular among African - Americans, and could help boost black turnout in Pinellas County, which includes St. Petersburg and Clearwater.
While President Barack Obama snubbed the congressman and endorsed no one, the Big Dog robo - called for Mr. Rangel and may have even boosted black turnout in Mr. Rangel's base.
The high levels of black turnout in battleground states that we saw in 2008 and 2012 should be repeated in 2016.
So the record Black turnout plus low turnout for whites and latinos in California (because everyone knew Obama would win the state by a landlslide) plus Obama's implicit endorsement made it pass.
In any case, exit poll data says black turnout in California was way up: From 6 percent of the electorate in 2004 to 10 percent this year.
There, Sharpton alluded to a memo that leaked from a pro-Espaillat political action committee that suggested the candidate would benefit from decreased black turnout.
But, Bright also benefited from historically high black turnout — in a seat where nearly three in ten residents are African - American — that will almost certainly drop off in 2010.
Minorities like blacks and Hispanics have historically had lower turnout (although black turnout exceeded white turnout in 2012 and some estimates say 2008 as well).
Joe Reed, the chairman of the black Alabama Democratic Conference, said worries about low black turnout had been refuted by what he had seen on the ground.
A strong turnout in Manhattan would favor Stringer, the Manhattan borough president, while a large black turnout would boost Spitzer.
If Obama is on the ticket and this AL House District could double black turnout and the Mayor who has done all of that tedious ground work is on the ticket a national D investment would look good.
What other dark Facebook ads might have been placed on behalf of the Trump campaign to suppress black turnout?
Despite nearly equal voter turnout — black turnout was slightly less than white turnout in 2008 but exceeded white turnout in 2012, 66 % to 64 % — the gap between party loyalty and policy output is wide for black voters.
A 5 % reduction in black turnout would cost him Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and North Carolina.
If Clinton gets closer than that, it's probably a sign that black turnout is holding up.
It was a black turnout problem.
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