Black Women Voters: By the Numbers

presidential gender watch 2016In April 2015, the Barbara Lee Family Foundation (BLFF) and the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP) launched Presidential Gender Watch 2016, a project to track, analyze, and illuminate gender dynamics in the 2016 presidential election. With the help of expert scholars and practitioners, Presidential Gender Watch worked for 21 months to further public understanding of how gender influences candidate strategy, voter engagement and expectations, media coverage, and electoral outcomes in campaigns for the nation’s highest executive office. The blog below was written for Presidential Gender Watch 2016, as part of our collective effort to raise questions, suggest answers, and complicate popular discussions about gender’s role in the presidential race.

 

If Hillary Clinton activated her “firewall” in the past week of presidential primaries, black women are a key component of it. Black voters voted overwhelmingly for Clinton in Democratic primaries across the nine states where race data is available, and the proportion of black women casting ballots for Clinton was even greater than the proportion of black men, based on exit polls reporting race by gender data. Gender gaps –the difference between women’s and men’s support for the winning candidates – range from 2 to 9 points among black voters in primaries in Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, Texas, and Virginia. Most significantly, Clinton has won more than 85% of black women’s votes in each of these states.

Clinton’s support among black women voters is even more significant since they have turned out at the highest rates of any race/gender subgroup in the past two presidential elections. More than 70% of black women voted in 2012, out-voting white women (65.6%), white men (62.6%), and black men (61.4%). Based on the available exit poll data from the Democratic primaries in 2016, black women continue to make up a larger proportion of the Democratic electorate than black men.

Clinton’s support among black women has been key to her ability, thus far, to reassemble the coalition that elected Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012. Just look at the past week’s primary results. Last Saturday, Clinton won 89% of black women’s votes in South Carolina, a state where 78% of black women voted for Obama in 2008. Clinton won 93% of black women’s votes in Alabama, the same state where she won just 18% of black women’s votes in 2008, when Obama won 81% of black women. In Georgia, Clinton won 86% of black women’s votes on Tuesday, compared to just 12% in 2008. (Obama won 87% of black women’s votes there in 2008.). Clinton won 86% and 85% of black women’s votes in Texas and Virginia respectively on Super Tuesday, states where she won less than 20% of black women’s support just 8 years ago. (Obama won 82% and 86% of black women’s votes in Texas and Virginia, respectively, in 2008.)

Despite the dominance of support for Clinton, black women voters are not monolithic. Generational, ideological, and regional differences – among others – influence the policy priorities and perspectives of black women voters, as do the experiences they bring to – and value most at – the ballot box. Too often, the strong majorities in black women’s support for any given candidate yield conclusions that their votes come en masse, making it all too easy for their influence to be overlooked and their support to be taken for granted.

That risk is particularly great as we move on to the general election. In 2008 and 2012, 96% of black women voters cast their ballots for Barack Obama. Regardless of which Democrat wins the nomination this year, there is no indication that black women – or black voters overall – will shift their allegiance to the Republican party. But even if that assumption of Democratic loyalty is true, there is no guarantee that enthusiasm, engagement, and turnout will match that which proved so valuable to Obama’s election and re-election. Already, the overall turnout numbers in the Democratic primaries are lower than those in 2008, while turnout on the Republican side is exceeding 2008 numbers by significant margins. The mobilization of voters in the primary and general election will matter when it comes to who votes on Election Day.

Black women’s voices have figured prominently in recent weeks on the Democratic primary campaign trail. Five black mothers of slain children traveled across states with Hillary Clinton, while former Ohio State Senator Nina Turner and legal scholar Michelle Alexander have publicly supported Sanders and questioned Clinton’s commitment to black America. Will these voices, and the conversations in which they are engaged, continue beyond primaries in demographically-rich states for black voters? Even more importantly, how do black women voters ensure that these conversations continue and deepen to yield substantive policy plans and positions to which any Democratic nominee can be held accountable?

Black women’s voices need to be heard and addressed in the remaining primary debates and beyond when nominees are selected in July. Harnessing the power of black women’s votes means leveraging enthusiasm in advance and boosting turnout in November to ensure that candidates feel compelled to address the issues of greatest importance to black women on the campaign trail and in office. Importantly, black women don’t just mobilize themselves; they organize their communities and bring others to the polls with them.

Numbers matter in elections. In 2016, the number of black women who supported Clinton in primaries to date have contributed significantly to her lead over Bernie Sanders. As we look to November, the number of black women who turn out on Election Day could very well determine who wins the White House.

Glynda Carr

Glynda Carr is the co-founder of Higher Heights for America, a national organization building the collective political power and leadership of Black women from the voting booth to elected office.

Kelly Dittmar

Kelly Dittmar is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Rutgers–Camden and Director of Research and Scholar at the Center for American Women and Politics at the Eagleton Institute of Politics. She is the co-author of A Seat at the Table: Congresswomen’s Perspectives on Why Their Representation Matters (Oxford University Press, 2018) (with Kira Sanbonmatsu and Susan J. Carroll) and author of Navigating Gendered Terrain: Stereotypes and Strategy in Political Campaigns (Temple University Press, 2015).