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Scott Rasmussen's Number of the Day for April 28, 2021

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By Scott Rasmussen

The Number of the Day columns published on Ballotpedia reflect the views of the author.

April 28, 2021: A comparison of the 2000 and the 2010 Census records found that 6% of the U.S. population gave different ethnic and racial responses between the two counts.[1]

Richard Alba, in “The Great Demographic Illusion: Majority, Minority, and the Expanding American Mainstream” uses this fact as one example showing that “race and ethnicity are not fixed and obvious in the same way that, say, age is.” Alba is a Distinguished Professor of Sociology at the Graduate Center, City University of New York.[1]

Alba argues that both census data and popular understandings of race are fundamentally flawed. At the center of the misunderstanding is “a robust development that is largely unheralded: a surge in the number of young Americans who come from mixed majority-minority families.” They “have one white parent and one nonwhite or Hispanic parent.” Currently, about one out of 10 births in the U.S. come from such parentage. And, that number will keep growing because nearly one out of five new weddings cross-racial or ethnic lines.[2]

Adding to the complexity is that people with the same ethnic heritage often have different attitudes depending upon how far removed they are from that heritage. For example, a plurality of Hispanic voters whose parents were both born in the United States favors Republicans on the generic congressional ballot. However, a solid majority of all other Hispanic voters prefer Democrats.[3]



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