Hispanic voters give Harris edge on healthcare and climate

Trump leads on immigration policy among Hispanics, Reuters/Ipsos polling shows

By Reuters

  • Follow us on
  • google-news
  • whatsapp
  • telegram

Top Stories

US Vice-President Kamala Harris in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US on August 20, 2024, and former US president Donald Trump in Bedminster, New Jersey, US, on August 15, 2024, are seen in a combination of file photographs.— Reuters file
US Vice-President Kamala Harris in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, US on August 20, 2024, and former US president Donald Trump in Bedminster, New Jersey, US, on August 15, 2024, are seen in a combination of file photographs.— Reuters file

Published: Tue 3 Sep 2024, 2:30 PM

Last updated: Tue 3 Sep 2024, 2:31 PM

Kamala Harris has neutralised Donald Trump's edge on the economy among Hispanic voters, and her 13 percentage point lead within that group reflects the fact they vastly prefer her approach to healthcare and climate change, Reuters/Ipsos polling shows.

On those latter issues, Hispanics favour Democratic Vice-President Harris' approach over Republican former president Trump's by wide margins — 18 points for healthcare and 23 points for climate change.


A diverse and fast-growing slice of the US electorate who are swing voters, Hispanics are an attractive target for both candidates in a contest that was shaken up in July when Democratic President Joe Biden folded his flagging re-election campaign and passed the torch to Harris.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted August 21-28, showed that the top issues for Hispanic registered voters ahead of the November 5 election largely track those of the country at large, with the economy, immigration, healthcare and climate change standing out as the group's top priorities.

While registered voters overall favour Trump's approach to the economy over Harris's by 45 per cent to 36 per cent, Hispanic registered voters viewed them equally, with each drawing 39 per cent support. That reflects an improvement for Democrats, after a Reuters/Ipsos poll in May showed Biden trailing Trump by four points on the economy in Hispanic voters' eyes.

Hispanic voters preferred Harris on healthcare policy, by 46 per cent to 29 per cent, and on climate change, with a 46 per cent to 23 per cent lead, bigger leads than she held among the broader electorate, which also favoured her on those two issues.

Trump held the advantage on immigration policy, with Hispanic voters preferring him over Harris 42 per cent to 37 per cent, narrower than his 46 per cent to 36 per cent lead among the broader electorate.

"The Latino vote is probably the most pure swing group of voters in America right now and will be for a long time," said Chuck Rocha, a Democratic strategist who advised Bernie Sanders' 2016 campaign, including on Latino outreach.

Aspirational story

Rocha said Harris, who is Black and of South Asian descent and whose parents immigrated to the US from Jamaica and India, is winning support from Hispanics by telling an aspirational life story that has countered Trump's strength on the economy, where he has a 20 point lead among White voters.

Many Hispanic voters have parents or grandparents who immigrated to the United States, and their lower-than-average incomes left them more vulnerable to the surge in US inflation in 2021 and 2022.

Trump leads on the economy among men and voters aged 35 and older, while he and Harris are closely matched among women and younger Americans, the new Reuters/Ipsos poll showed. Harris has a strong lead on the economy among Black voters.

The poll was conducted nationally and gathered responses from 4,253 US adults, including 3,562 registered voters and 412 Hispanic registered voters. It had margins of error of about 2 percentage points for voters overall and about 4 points for Hispanics.

Hispanics made up about 14 per cent of voting age US citizens in 2022, up from 9 per cent in Census Bureau estimates for 2005-2009. Biden won the Hispanic vote by 21 points in 2020, according to an exit poll analysis by Pew Research, so Harris' current 13 point lead among registered Hispanic voters, should it hold through Election Day, would signal an improvement for Trump.

Republican strategists say even with Harris' gains on the economy relative to Biden, Trump is still doing well with Hispanics.

"Hispanics have historically strongly favoured the Democratic Party, so for Trump to be breaking even with Harris on the economy has to be seen as a win for him," Giancarlo Sopo, a Republican strategist who led Trump’s 2020 media outreach targeting Hispanic voters.

US inflation has cooled over the last year and in June consumer prices fell for the first time in four years amid cheaper petrol and moderating rents.

Voter sympathies could shift between now and Election Day and it remains to be seen which, if any, blocs of voters will turn out in droves. Experts say predicting the Hispanic vote is particularly hard in 2024 because Hispanic voters skew younger than the rest of the electorate, so a larger share are first time voters.

"It could be anybody’s race still," said University of Arizona political scientist Lisa M. Sanchez.


More news from World