Demographics

Winning Over the Values Voters

In Barack Obama's now famous remarks to rich donors in San Francisco in early April, he attributed the fact that white Democrats in small towns were resisting his candidacy to their anger over their economic misfortune. "They get bitter," Obama said, "and cling to guns or religion... as a way to explain their frustration." Obama seemed to be implying that social conservatism is a toxic byproduct of economic distress -- and it may have hurt him in Pennsylvania last week,… more

Michael Lind | Newsweek | May 5, 2008

Tomas Jimenez on the Pat Morrison Show | 'Mexican Americans, Assimilations, and Race'

Mexican Americans, Assimilations, and Race (KPCC Radio, Los Angeles)

Mexican Americans have not fully integrated into U.S. society, even by the third and fourth generation, according to a new UCLA study covering 40 years. Although many speak English fluently, prefer American music, and sometimes vote Republican, they continue to live in majority Hispanic neighborhoods and think of themselves as "Mexican" or "Mexican-American." Patt looks at the findings, both encouraging and troubling, and the reasons behind them.

New America Fellow… more

March 18, 2008

White Like Us

Six weeks ago, 29-year-old Culver City Internet copy writer Christian Lander started a blog, stuffwhitepeoplelike.wordpress.com, on a whim, thinking he'd poke fun at himself and fellow white people. Spending roughly two hours a day writing satirical posts about "stuff white people like," Lander had no idea how much his little inside joke would catch on. In the first week, the site received about 200 hits a day. The next week it jumped to 600, and then 4,000 the next. By… more

Gregory Rodriguez | Los Angeles Times | February 25, 2008

The Black-Brown Divide

I imagine he said it as if he were confessing a deep, dark secret. And, of course (wink, wink), he had no idea his little confession would make the rounds. But when Sergio Bendixen, Hillary Clinton's pollster and resident Latino expert, told the New Yorker after her win in New Hampshire that "the Hispanic voter -- and I want to say this very carefully -- has not shown a lot of willingness or affinity to support black candidates," he started… more

Gregory Rodriguez | TIME Magazine | February 4, 2008

America Still Works

Anyone who reads the serious press about the condition of the US might be excused for believing that the country is headed towards a series of deep crises. This impression is exacerbated by economic slowdown and by the presidential primaries, in which candidates announce bold plans to rescue the country from disaster. But even in more normal times there are three ubiquitous myths about America that make the country seem weaker and more chaotic than it really is. The first… more

Michael Lind | Prospect | February 2008

Racial and Ethnic Differences in Child Well-Being

Parents and policy makers have long looked to close the educational, health, economic and other gaps in child well-being between children of different backgrounds. As the 2008 campaign heats up, many are wondering about the increasingly diverse generation of America’s children and asking: Where is policy helping and failing to close the gaps between children of different backgrounds? Where do the gaps currently exist? What changes could have the greatest impact? On January 29th, we… more
01/29/2008 - 10:30am
01/29/2008 - 12:15pm

Clinton's Latino Spin

If a Hillary Clinton campaign official told a reporter that white voters never support black candidates, would the media have swallowed the message whole? What if a campaign pollster began whispering that Jews don't have an "affinity" for African American politicians? Would the pundits have accepted the premise unquestioningly?

A few weeks ago, Sergio Bendixen, a Clinton pollster and Latino expert, publicly articulated what campaign officials appear to have been whispering for months. In an interview with Ryan Lizza of… more

Gregory Rodriguez | Los Angeles Times | January 28, 2008

Child Well-Being Index in USA Today | 'Report: Black, Hispanic Children Making Gains'

Report: Black, Hispanic Children Making Gains (USA Today)

Black and Hispanic children have made significant gains in health, safety and income over the past two decades, narrowing gaps between them and white children, according to a pioneering report on child development to be released Tuesday.*

They still fare worse overall than whites, but they're catching up in several areas and are less likely to smoke cigarettes, drink alcohol, abuse drugs or commit suicide, according to the… more

David Gray | January 25, 2008

Gregory Rodriguez's New Book Featured in The Sacramento Bee

As Ward Connerly prepares initiatives to abolish race-based affirmative action in five more states, New America Foundation fellow Gregory Rodriguez, no fan of Connerly's movement, has published an eye-opening book that nonetheless reinforces deep questions about the nation's racial assumptions and categories.

Connerly is the Sacramento businessman and ex-regent of the University of California who drove the successful campaigns overturning race-based preference policies in public education, employment and contracting in California, Washington and Michigan. He's now planning similar campaigns in Arizona,… more

Gregory Rodriguez | November 28, 2007

Gay -- the New Straight

Last Tuesday, the New York Times ran a front-page story on the diminishing allure of gay enclaves in the United States. The next day, the San Francisco Chronicle published a Page 1 story explaining how same-sex couples in California are a lot more socioeconomically and ethnically diverse -- read: less white and less wealthy -- than you might believe. The Williams Institute at UCLA Law School will release a report today by demographer Gary Gates that all but poses the… more

Gregory Rodriguez | Los Angeles Times | November 5, 2007