Latino Decisions
Nearly 60 Percent of Latino Voters Have Yet to Be Contacted by Candidates or Parties in Advance of 2018 Election
Latino voters in Texas most likely to view participating in the 2018 Election as more important than the 2014 Election.
Three in Four Latino Voters Believe President Trump Should Step Down If Evidence Finds His Campaign Interfered in Election 2016
Results show Latino voters split on Robert Mueller, with less than half reporting that they think he is conducting a fair investigation into a possible connection to the Russian government
Kavanaugh Increases the Divide Between Latinos and the Republican Party
How are Latino voters reacting to these hearings?
Nearly Half of Latino Voters Support Delaying Nomination Process for Supreme Court Nominee Kavanaugh Until Additional Documents Released
Poll results show Democrats and Republicans both need to a better job educating the Latino electorate about their policy agenda and priorities, including the Kavanaugh nomination.
ANALYSIS: To Take Back Congress, Democrats Need to Mobilize Latino Voters
If the Democratic Party and candidates engage in direct voter mobilization efforts, a time-tested strategy, there is reason to believe the blue wave will be overwhelming.
New Poll Finds Latino Voters Still Ignored in Lead Up to Election 2018
With Election Day only two months away, nearly 60 percent of Latino voters report not being contacted by a campaign, political party or organization asking them to register or vote.
Immigration Is Not a Racially Divisive Issue for Voters in 2018
Is the so-called “whitelash” over? The results of the Latino Decisions survey suggest that is indeed the case as White voters have softened their positions on immigration.
New Poll: Latino, AAPI, Native American, Black, and White Voters in Battleground Districts
Voters of every race are upset and angry over the child separation and detention policy, by large margins.
Poll Finds Clear Leader in Mexican Presidential Race Among U.S.-Based Voters
Andrés Manuel López Obrador enjoys a big lead among voting-age Mexican nationals residing in the U.S., especially among those registered to vote by mail.