Kerry overpowers Bush on Black vote - 90% of African American Voters Reject Bush
Republicans' hopes that President Bush would improve his
standing with black voters came to little or nothing Tuesday. Bush was
doing as poorly with blacks as he did in 2000, getting only about one
in 10 of their votes, exit polls indicated. His performance with black
voters in 2000 was the worst for a Republican presidential candidate
since Barry Goldwater got 6 percent in 1964 in his race against Lyndon
Johnson. Lynn Roberts needed no encouragement from the get-out-the-vote
workers in her neighborhood at midmorning on Election Day. "I want Bush
out!" she yelled across shady Huron Street before the workers,
promoting Democratic candidates, could reach her. "I already voted. I
don't play around. This morning I was No. 87." Ms. Roberts, who said
she had checked the digital reader on the optical-scanning voting
machine to see that hers was the 87th ballot cast at her precinct in
Jacksonville on Tuesday, was just one of thousands of newly energized
and mobilized blacks who voted here and across the country, including
many in Florida who felt they had waited four years to have their votes
counted at last. Nationwide, blacks went to the polls in large numbers
and voted overwhelmingly for Senator John Kerry. They were prompted by
vast get-out-the-vote drives, big increases in minority voter
registration, new early voting periods and political passions kindled
by issues from war to tax cuts. And still others saw themselves as part
of a new crest in a civil rights struggle not yet complete four decades
after federal voting rights laws were passed.[more] and [more] and [more]
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies Poll which
claimed that Bush's support from African Americans had doubled was
Wrong. [more]
Record turnout highlights nation's divisions [more]