Thu Jul 24, 2008 12:33pm EDT
By Tim Gaynor
PHOENIX (Reuters) - Two-thirds of U.S. Hispanic voters support Democrat Barack Obama for president over Republican John McCain
and the partisan gap among the United States' fastest growing voter
bloc is broader than at any point this decade, a study found.
The
nationwide telephone survey by the Pew Hispanic Center released on
Thursday said 66 percent of a sample of 2,015 registered Latino voters
polled said they backed Obama, with 23 percent supporting McCain, a
senator from Arizona.
The
survey said Obama's strong showing represented a sharp reversal in his
fortunes from the primaries "when he lost the Latino vote to Hillary
Rodham Clinton by a nearly 2-to-1 ratio, giving rise to speculation in
some quarters that Hispanics were disinclined to vote for a black
candidate."
The study said
65 percent of Latino registered voters now identified with, or leaned
toward, the Democratic Party, compared with just 26 percent who said
they identified with the Republican Party.
"This
39 percentage point Democratic Party identification edge is larger than
it has been at any time this decade," the study said.
In
2004, President George W. Bush won about 40 percent of the Hispanic
vote -- a Republican record -- when he beat Democrat John Kerry. Since
then opinion polls showed Republican standing among Latinos had been
hurt by a national debate on immigration reform.
The
study found 32 percent of respondents said being black would help
Obama, an Illinois senator, with Latino voters, while 11 percent said
it would hurt. The majority, 53 percent, said his race would make no
difference to Latino voters.
Hispanics, who comprise 15 percent of the U.S. population and 9 percent
of the electorate, could be a critical swing voting bloc in
battleground states in the U.S. Southwest, as well as in Florida.
In
recent weeks both McCain and Obama have addressed several national
Hispanic organizations in their hunt for votes, stressing economic and
educational proposals they said would help Latinos as well as reviving
plans for a comprehensive overhaul of immigration laws.
The
study found that 93 percent of respondents said family and pocketbook
issues such as education were the most important to them, topping
immigration, which was a priority for 75 percent.
More
than three quarters of Hispanic registered voters, or 76 percent of the
total, said they had a favorable opinion of Obama. By contrast, 44
percent of Hispanics have a favorable opinion of McCain, and 27 percent
have a favorable opinion of Bush.
A drive by Hispanic activists is seeking to get 2 million new voters registered before the election in November.
The survey was conducted between June 9 and July 13 by telephone and had a margin of error of 2.8 percentage points.
(Reporting by Tim Gaynor; Editing by David Wiessler)
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