subgenius wrote:dude, your ignoring the real numbers...again, you have yet to resolve that while the Hispanic vote is increasing so is its percentage voting Republican.
Dude, you have no evidence. In national exit polls 27% voted for Romney, 28% voted for Trump. One percent is within the margin of error, there is no difference.
http://www.cnn.com/election/results/exit-pollshttp://www.cnn.com/election/2012/results/race/presidenAs for Texas, "The exit poll for Texas reported that 61 percent of Hispanics voted for Clinton and 34 percent for Trump. On its face, this seems implausible. Clinton won 560,000 more votes in Texas than Obama did in 2012. Moreover, voter turnout in Texas was two points higher this year than in 2012, and Hispanics are the fastest-growing segment of the Texas electorate. Is it possible that Clinton gained 560,000 votes in Texas while winning only 61 percent of Hispanic votes? Some analysts looking at county-level data think that rural Hispanic voters shifted toward Trump, as Geraldo Cadava argued, or that Clinton did worse with Hispanic voters than Obama, as Harry Enten argued. But counties can be large and, therefore, not well suited to learning about the behavior of subgroups like Hispanics........
Finally
, we estimate that Clinton won 77 percent of Hispanics and Trump won 18 percent. These estimates strongly suggest that the exit poll estimates (61 percent to 34 percent) underestimate Clinton’s strength among Hispanics in Texas. The Latino Decisions exit poll in Texas — which reported that 80 percent of Latinos voted for Clinton and 16 percent for Trump — appears closer to the truth."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/mon ... f72a3ebac4