U.S. Newswire -- January 5, 2006
The Latino Coalition today released the results of the 2005 National
Latino Survey during a press conference in Washington, D.C. Survey top-
line results and power-point presentation are available at
http://www.TheLatinoCoalition.com.
"This survey has become the most reliable and accurate study on Hispanic
political and consumer behavior in the U.S. The 2004 National Latino
Survey was dead-on accurate in predicting the Latino vote in the 2004
elections," said TLC President Robert Deposada. "We predicted the
nine-point spread between Senator Kerry and President Bush, while all
other surveys predicted a Kerry win of over 30 points. The results of
this year's survey offer similar surprising results and highlight the
future trends of Latino adults and Latino voters in the U.S. However,
contrary to past years these trends spell trouble for the Republican
Party."
"This survey shows there are two very different segments within the
Hispanic community: recent immigrants and those who have been here for
years," Deposada added. "Those who have been here longer tend to mostly
speak English, are registered voters, are in better financial status,
and tend to be more focused on issues that affect their pocket books
like taxes, education and health care. The more recent immigrants tend
to have lower incomes, speak mostly Spanish only and are more concerned
over immigration policies and language barriers. Their views on
political issues are many times at odds. Politicians from both political
parties need to understand these differences and the diversity within
the Latino community if they want to successfully reach out to these
voters and future voters."
The debate over immigration reform appears to be one of the hottest
issues in the upcoming elections and is a perfect example of this
diversity. "Hispanic registered voters are strongly supporting
initiatives to reform immigration while penalizing illegal behavior. A
majority of Hispanic voters (52.4 percent) support initiatives that
would not allow people who entered this county illegally to become
citizens unless they reapply from their country of origin," Deposada
said. "By a margin of 50 percent to 41 percent, Hispanic voters support
increasing the number of border patrol agents in our southern border,
and also support new laws to make sure that employers can only hire
workers who are in the U.S. legally (50 percent to 41 percent). An
overwhelming majority of 82 percent support the creation of a new
Temporary Worker Program. Also a plurality (41.2 percent to 39.9
percent) support imposing a fine of at least $2,000 for illegal
immigrants in order to gain legal employment as a temporary worker in
the U.S."
"Meanwhile, non-registered Latinos have completely different views on
these issues," Deposada added. "They overwhelmingly oppose laws to make
sure that employers can only hire legal immigrants (65 percent to 28
percent); oppose increasing the number of border patrol agents along our
southern border (61 percent to 29 percent); and they support allowing
illegal immigrants to have access to citizenship (50 percent to 40
percent)."
"While there has been enormous progress for the Republican Party under
President George W. Bush, there is real danger for a repeat of the Pete
Wilson era that alienated Hispanics from the GOP for years," Deposada
added. "If the Republican leadership in Congress allows an extremist
group to control the debate over immigration reform and put partisan
rhetoric over real commonsense legislation, the GOP will eliminate all
the progress achieved by President Bush in attracting Hispanics into the
GOP."
"The Republican leadership in Congress has failed miserably in keeping
the coattails of President Bush among Hispanic voters," Deposada said.
"When compared to last year's number on the question of who does a
better job at handling key issues, Democrats in Congress kept the same
level of support John Kerry had and improved on it, while Republicans
cut the numbers in half compared to President Bush:
--"Creating more jobs and improving the economy"
Republicans in Congress (2005): 19 percent
Democrats in Congress (2005): 50 percent
President Bush (2004): 34 percent
John Kerry (2004): 54 percent
--"Improving Education"
Republicans in Congress (2005): 20 percent
Democrats in Congress (2005): 50 percent
President Bush (2004): 35 percent
John Kerry (2004): 52 percent
--"Providing more affordable health care"
Republicans in Congress (2005): 15 percent
Democrats in Congress (2005): 55 percent
President Bush (2004): 30 percent
John Kerry (2004): 52 percent
--"Representing your views on immigration"
Republicans in Congress (2005): 17 percent
Democrats in Congress (2005): 46 percent
President Bush (2004): 35 percent
John Kerry (2004): 43 percent
--"Keeping America safe and fighting terrorism"
Republicans in Congress (2005): 30 percent
Democrats in Congress (2005): 30 percent
President Bush (2004): 50 percent
John Kerry (2004): 36 percent
--"Being in touch with the Hispanic community"
Republicans in Congress (2005): 16 percent
Democrats in Congress (2005): 57 percent
President Bush (2004): 37 percent
John Kerry (2004): 37 percent
When asked what party they identify with, Democrats outpaced Republicans
by a margin of 58 percent to 23 percent, compared to a margin of 52
percent to 29 percent last year. If the midterm congressional elections
were held today, Democrats would win overwhelmingly with a margin of 61
percent to 21 percent, compared to last year's 56 percent to 30 percent.
"The Republican Party is rapidly losing all the gains they achieved
under President Bush in the Hispanic community," Deposada added. "If the
GOP wants to remain competitive among Hispanic voters, they need to wage
an all out effort to regain the momentum."
Senator Hillary Clinton enjoys a very favorable rating among Hispanics
(56 percent to 10 percent), and is heavily favored in the Democratic
primary for President over Senator John Kerry in 2008 (48 percent to 15
percent).
However, not all is bad news for Republicans. The survey shows that
Hispanic voters remain very conservative on social and economic issues:
-- By a margin of 44 percent to 9 percent, Hispanics support reducing
taxes on families and businesses as the best way to grow the economy and
create jobs for average Americans;
-- By a margin of 51 percent to 30 percent Hispanic voters oppose
raising taxes on remittances and money transfers in order to pay for
indigent health care;
-- By a margin of 55 percent to 35 percent, Hispanic voters would prefer
to be covered by a private health care plan over a government-run
program like Medicaid;
-- By a margin of 57 percent to 27 percent Hispanics identify themselves
as pro-life
-- By a margin of 57 percent to 36 percent Hispanics support laws to
require parental notification before underage teenagers can get an
abortion; and,
-- 62 percent oppose Gay Marriages.
This national Hispanic survey was conducted among 1,000 Hispanic adults
by Latino Opinions between December 10-13, 2005. All interviews were
conducted by professional English and Spanish speaking interviewers via
telephone. Respondents were given the option of conducting the survey in
English or Spanish. Interview selection was at random within
predetermined population units. These units were structured to
statistically correlate with the nation's adult Hispanic population
according to the 2004 U.S. Census estimates. The accuracy of this
national survey of 1,000 Hispanic adults is within ± 3.1 percent at a 95
percent confidence interval. For more detailed information on the survey
and to review past surveys, please visit
http://www.TheLatinoCoalition.com
---
The Latino Coalition is a non-profit, non-partisan organization based in
Washington, D.C. TLC was established to address policy issues that
directly affect the well-being of Hispanics in the United States. TLC's
agenda is to develop and promote policies that
will foster economic equivalency and enhance overall business, economic,
and social development of Hispanics.