Latino vote makes a big difference

Wins by Smiddy, Jacobs attributed to Latino support

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Back in 1992, Latinos made up about 8 percent of Illinois’ population, yet only 1 percent of that year’s total Election Day voter pool was Latino. The trend continued for years. Latinos just didn’t vote.

Twenty years later, things have changed in a big way. According to exit polling, 12 percent of Illinois voters last week were Latino, which is pretty close to the 16 percent of Illinois’ overall Latino population.

That high participation contributed to many of last week’s stunning electoral surprises.

Twenty years ago, 85 percent of Illinois’ voting-day pool was white and 12 percent was African-American, with the other 3 percent being Latino, Asian and other. But last week, whites made up 70 percent of voters, and blacks were 14 percent, while Asian-Americans were 2 percent. 

In 2004, 2006 and 2010, exit polls found that 8 percent of Illinois’ Election Day voter pool was Latino. The Latino vote was just 6 percent in 2008. A persistent, yearslong push by immigration rights groups to register Latinos to vote and then get them to the polls has most definitely had an impact here this year, as well as a decidedly hostile national Republican message. 

The Democratic Party focused hard on getting Latinos to the polls. Only about 40 percent of Latinos live in Chicago, with the vast majority living in the suburbs and downstate. So concentrating on those voters was a way of pumping up the total Democratic vote, and it appeared to work quite effectively. 

According to exit polling, 81 percent of Illinois Latinos voted for President Obama this past Tuesday. That trend presumably resonated all the way down the ticket.

DuPage County is now almost 14 percent Latino, which could be why the Democratic Party did so well there this year. Lake County is now 20 percent Latino. Will County is 16 percent. Kane County is 31 percent Latino. 

State Rep. Skip Saviano, R-Elmwood Park, went into Election Day hoping to win his new district’s DuPage County precincts by 1,500 votes to overcome an expected 1,200-vote deficit on the Cook County side. He ended up doing slightly better than that in Cook, losing by only 1,100 votes, but then he lost DuPage by 26 votes. Despite an endorsement by U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez, the Latino vote appears to have done him in. 

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