Tag Archives: race

Race and Representation in the Battleground Counties

Voter turnout nationally during the 2020 Presidential Election was 66%—the highest since 1900. But a recent analysis from The Union of Concerned Scientists of voter turnout by precinct in 11 battleground counties found clear racial disparities, driven in part by differences in election resources & voter communication in individual precincts & counties. The findings are presented through an interactive map and also available in more fun forms on twitter and Instagram. The full report, Race and Representation in Battleground Counties: Racial Disparities in Voter Turnout and Ballot Rejections in the 2020 Election, is worth the read.

As summarized by the authors:

“The results show that 2020 turnout was highest in majority-White precincts and lowest in majority-Black and majority-Hispanic precincts.”

[At the same time,] “Many majority-Black precincts turned out at rates higher than the average majority-White precinct in 2020. Similarly, turnout rates in some majority-Hispanic precincts were close to the average turnout in majority-White precincts. ”

Poverty explains much of the difference, but the authors conclude that:

“While inequalities in voter turnout are more persistent and rooted in deeper social inequities, democratic capacity can be cultivated even in hostile conditions. Local civic organizations can also benefit from greater data transparency and data sharing in partnership with local election administrators.”

With a focus on large and diverse communities within electorally pivotal states, the report looks at:

  • Maricopa County, AZ 
  • Fulton County, GA 
  • Wayne County, MI 
  • Columbus, Durham, and Mecklenburg Counties, NC 
  • Cuyahoga and Lorain Counties, OH 
  • Allegheny and Philadelphia Counties, PA 
  • Milwaukee County, WI 
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New OMB race/ethnicity categories

Justin here. This is a really big deal: the federal government’s got new standards for collecting data on race and ethnicity.

The Office of Management and Budget has a sneak preview today of tomorrow’s update of “Statistical Policy Directive No. 15: Standards for Maintaining, Collecting, and Presenting Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity.” SPD 15 was initially developed in 1977 to help provide consistent data on race and ethnicity throughout the federal government, and drives all kinds of data collection in all kinds of contexts, including the Census, redistricting, and VRA claims. It was updated once in 1997, and this is a long-awaited version 3.0.

There are some big changes in the new standards, but the biggest include combining a question on Hispanic/Latino heritage along with other categories in one race-and-ethnicity question (the previous approach purported to separate race in one question and Hispanic/Latino ethnicity in another); adding a Middle Eastern or North African (MENA) category; and collecting detailed subgroup information within each category as a default.

Among other impacts, in applications like the Census and intercensal questionnaires, these standards will likely continue to help more accurately reveal how multiethnic we are. (Past methodology changes have already given us a far more accurate picture than we used to have: some of the country’s diversification is due to demographic change, but an awful lot is due to better capacity to recognize how diverse we already were, in ways hidden by our measurement instruments.) I’ve written a bit on this in the context of the Census, SPD 15, and the ways that our tools have changed over time.

There are variations available for specialty uses, but here’s what the standard new data collection will look like:

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