Women, young people, African-Americans, Hispanics… which voters voted for Donald Trump or Kamala Harris? : News

Women, young people, African-Americans, Hispanics… which voters voted for Donald Trump or Kamala Harris? : News
Women, young people, African-Americans, Hispanics… which voters voted for Donald Trump or Kamala Harris? : News

Four years after his defeat in 2020, Donald Trump benefited from better scores among certain electorates to sign his return to the White House, deciphers Le Parisien, Wednesday November 6. For her part, Kamala Harris was acclaimed by young voters and the most educated.

Meaningful lessons after Donald Trump's victory, Wednesday, November 6, in the American presidential election. As reported The Parisianseveral exit polls provide a better understanding of the distribution of Americans' vote for the 47th President of the United States and his Democratic rival Kamala Harris, according to gender, age, level of education or even group. ethnic.

Kamala Harris benefited from the vote of women (54%) and Donald Trump from that of men (54%), according to data from Reuters, which surveyed more than 20,000 voters. Note that Donald Trump saw his score increase by two points compared to 2020 among women. Among ethnic groups, African-Americans overwhelmingly supported Kamala Harris (86%) as did, to a lesser extent, Hispanics (53%) and Asians (56%). As for women, Donald Trump increased his 2020 total by thirteen points among Hispanics (45%) and garnered more votes among the Asian community. Although he retains the majority among the white population with 55% of the vote against 43% for Kamala Harris, Donald Trump saw his score drop by three points among this electorate.

Young and highly educated voters choose Kamala Harris

In terms of age categories, young voters set their sights on Kamala Harris, with 55% of the vote against 42% for Donald Trump. The Democrat also won the majority of the 30-44 year old vote (51%), compared to 45% for the Republican. Finally, the level of education also seems to have had an impact on the election. Nearly six in ten college-educated voters said they voted for Kamala Harris, while a similar proportion of voters without degrees said they voted for Donald Trump.

published on November 6 at 5:56 p.m., Quentin Marchal, 6Medias

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