1 / 40

Latino Profile of Los Angeles City and County, California, and the United States

Latino Profile of Los Angeles City and County, California, and the United States. Prepared for the Angelinos for a Better Future Initiative of Southwest Voter Registration Education Project by the William C. Velasquez Institute Presentation Antonio Gonzalez President

thanos
Download Presentation

Latino Profile of Los Angeles City and County, California, and the United States

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Latino Profile of Los Angeles City and County, California, and the United States Prepared for the Angelinos for a Better Future Initiative of Southwest Voter Registration Education Project by the William C. Velasquez Institute Presentation Antonio Gonzalez President William C. Velasquez Institute and Southwest Voter Registration Education Project 2914 N. Main St Los Angeles, CA 91723 Phone: 323-222-2217 (WCVI) Phone: 323-343-9299 (SVREP) Email: agonzalez@wcvi.org Email: agonzalez@svrep.org

  2. Los Angeles City and County Detailed Information

  3. Los Angeles County – Population by Majority Race/Ethnicity

  4. Los Angeles County – Latino Registration Percentage

  5. Los Angeles City – Population by Majority Race/Ethnicity

  6. Los Angeles City – Latino Registration Percentage

  7. Registration by Los Angeles County, City, and City Council District Data Source: William C. Velasquez Institute; Registration Current as of January 2008

  8. Selected 2001 and 2005 Election Results for Los Angeles City by City Council District Data Source: Los Angeles City Clerk. Note: 2001 and 2005 City Council Districts Different. Major Differences between CD 6 (new Latino Seat), 2, 5, and 11. All others similar.

  9. Upcoming Election Information

  10. Super Tuesday Latino Vote in Democratic Presidential Primary

  11. Latino Vote in Democratic Presidential Primary

  12. California Total and Latino Votes Cast in 2000, 2004, and 2008 Presidential Primaries

  13. California Latino Voter Polling Trends for Democratic Presidential Primary

  14. 2008 U.S. Presidential Election Battleground States

  15. 2008 U.S. Senate Races - CloseCongressional Quarterly Ratings

  16. 2004 Registration, Turnout, and Latino Potentialby Close Senate Race

  17. 2006 U.S. House Election ResultsParty by Margin of Victory - All

  18. 2006 U.S. House Election ResultsParty by Margin of Victory – Close Elections

  19. Democrats Connecticut 2 - Joe Courtney - 0.0% Georgia 12 - John Barrow - 0.6% Pennsylvania 8 - Patrick J. Murphy - 0.6% Georgia 8 - Jim Marshall - 1.0% Florida 16 - Tim Mahoney - 1.8% Wisconsin 8 - Steve Kagen - 2.1% Kentucky 3 - John Yarmuth - 2.4% New York 19 - John Hall - 2.4% New Hampshire 1 - Carol Shea-Porter - 2.7% Iowa 2 - Dave Loebsack - 2.8% Kansas 2 - Nancy Boyda - 3.5% Florida 22 - Ron Klein - 3.8% Pennsylvania 4 - Jason Altmire - 3.8% Arizona 5 - Harry E. Mitchell - 4.0% Indiana 9 - Baron P. Hill - 4.5% Republicans Florida 13 - Vern Buchanan - 0.2% North Carolina 8 - Robin Hayes - 0.2% New Mexico 1 - Heather A. Wilson - 0.4% Ohio 15 - Deborah Pryce - 0.5% Wyoming AL - Barbara Cubin - 0.5% Ohio 2 - Jean Schmidt - 1.1% New Jersey 7 - Mike Ferguson - 1.4% Pennsylvania 6 - Jim Gerlach - 1.4% New York 25 - James T. Walsh - 1.6% Nevada 3 - Jon Porter - 1.9% Colorado 4 - Marilyn Musgrave - 2.5% Illinois 6 - Peter Roskam - 2.8% Virginia 2 - Thelma Drake - 2.8% New York 29 - John R. "Randy" Kuhl Jr. - 3.0% Washington 8 - Dave Reichert - 3.0% California 4 - John T. Doolittle - 3.1% Connecticut 4 - Christopher Shays - 3.4% Michigan 7 - Tim Walberg - 3.9% New York 26 - Thomas M. Reynolds - 4.0% Ohio 1 - Steve Chabot - 4.4% Close Margins of Victory in 2006Less Than 5%

  20. 2010 Gubernatorial Elections

  21. 2010 U.S. Senate Elections

  22. California Demographic Trends

  23. California Population Comparison by Ethnic Group, 2000-2050 Source: State of California, Department of Finance, Population Projections by Race/Ethnicity, Gender and Age for California and Its Counties 2000-2050, Sacramento, California, May 2004. Note: The Department of Finance uses a baseline cohort-component method to project population by gender, race/ethnicity and age. For the purposes of this projection, the seven-race/ethnic categories are mutually exclusive. Minority refers to Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, Black, and American Indian populations. Data compiled by the William C. Velasquez Institute

  24. California Population Shares by Ethnic Group, 2000-2050 Source: State of California, Department of Finance, Population Projections by Race/Ethnicity, Gender and Age for California and Its Counties 2000-2050, Sacramento, California, May 2004. Note: The Department of Finance uses a baseline cohort-component method to project population by gender, race/ethnicity and age. For the purposes of this projection, the seven-race/ethnic categories are mutually exclusive. Minority refers to Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, Black, and American Indian populations. Due to aggregation of Hispanic figures, percentages do not equal 100%. Data compiled by the William C. Velasquez Institute

  25. Growth of Total California Population by Ethnic Group, (2000-2050) Source: State of California, Department of Finance, Population Projections by Race/Ethnicity, Gender and Age for California and Its Counties 2000-2050, Sacramento, California, May 2004. Note: The Department of Finance uses a baseline cohort-component method to project population by gender, race/ethnicity and age. For the purposes of this projection, the seven-race/ethnic categories are mutually exclusive. Minority refers to Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, Black, and American Indian populations. Data compiled by the William C. Velasquez Institute

  26. Composition of Total population of California by Race/Ethnicity, 2000-2050, May 2004 Source: State of California, Department of Finance, Population Projections by Race/Ethnicity, Gender and Age for California and Its Counties 2000-2050, Sacramento, California, May 2004. Note: The Department of Finance uses a baseline cohort-component method to project population by gender, race/ethnicity and age. For the purposes of this projection, the seven-race/ethnic categories are mutually exclusive. Minority refers to Latino, Asian/Pacific Islander, Black, and American Indian populations. Data compiled by the William C. Velasquez Institute

  27. California Total and Latino Registration Comparison by Assembly District 2004-2007

  28. Select National Latino Demographic and Election Information

  29. Top 10 Most Latino States in 2006 by Latino Population Total Table 5: Estimates of the Population by Race Alone or in Combination(1) and Hispanic or Latino Origin for the United States and States: July 1, 2006 (SC-EST2006-05) Source: Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau. Release Date: May 17, 2007. (1) 'In combination' means in combination with one or more other races. The sum of the five race groups adds to more than the total population because individuals may report more than one race.

  30. Top 10 Most Latino States in 2006 by Latino Population Percent Table 5: Estimates of the Population by Race Alone or in Combination(1) and Hispanic or Latino Origin for the United States and States: July 1, 2006 (SC-EST2006-05) Source: Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau. Release Date: May 17, 2007. (1) 'In combination' means in combination with one or more other races. The sum of the five race groups adds to more than the total population because individuals may report more than one race.

  31. 2006 United States Latino Population by State Data Source: Table 5 - Estimates of the Population by Race Alone or in Combination(1) and Hispanic or Latino Origin for the United States and States: July 1, 2006 (SC-EST2006-05) Source: Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau. Release Date: May 17, 2007.

  32. 2006 United States Latino Population Percent by State Data Source: Table 5 - Estimates of the Population by Race Alone or in Combination(1) and Hispanic or Latino Origin for the United States and States: July 1, 2006 (SC-EST2006-05) Source: Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau. Release Date: May 17, 2007.

  33. 2004 United States Latino Unregistered Citizen Voting Age Population by State Data Source: US Census Bureau, Current Population Reports: Voting and Registration in the Election of November 2004 to 1972.

  34. 2004 United States Latino Registration Percent by State Data Source: US Census Bureau, Current Population Reports: Voting and Registration in the Election of November 2004 to 1972.

  35. Latino Voter Registration, National Elections, 1972-2004 +2008 Projection Source: US Census Bureau, Current Population Reports: Voting and Registration in the Election of November 2004 to 1972.

  36. Latino Votes Cast,National Elections, 1972-2004 +2008 Projection Source: US Census Bureau, Current Population Reports: Voting and Registration in the Election of November 2004 to 1972.

  37. Latino Elected Officials by State: Largest Latino States – Gains Since 1996 Data Source: 2007 National Directory of Latino Elected Officials, NALEO Educational Fund

  38. Latino Elected Officials by Level of Office in 2007

  39. Latino Elected Officials by State: Largest Latino States Data Source: 2007 National Directory of Latino Elected Officials, NALEO Educational Fund

  40. Latino Elected Officials by State: New Latino Gains Since 1996 Data Source: 2007 National Directory of Latino Elected Officials, NALEO Educational Fund

More Related