That's what I thought. And it proves my point. Somehow, with a 93% white majority, New Hampshire went blue. Now @
Swordsmyth wants to talk about minority voting patterns? Guess what I have yet to see?
The breakdown of minority voting in New Hampshire! Maybe it's been posted here, but I haven't seen it. I haven't seen @
AntiFederalist post it. I haven't seen @
kahless post it. I haven't seen you post it. All we know is, a
few more minorities now live in NH and NH went blue. Okay. I know that, while nationwide latinos favored
democrats 69 to 29, in Tennessee it was only
54 to 46. So the Tennessee GOP beat the hispanic spread on the vote. I guess New Hampshire didn't have a senate race this time? CNN has no senate exit poll for New Hampshire. And the exit polls they have aren't broken out by race.
So here's what I know (besides the fact that your California example is basically meaningless.) A Ron Paul democrat can with the U.S. Senate primary, be pro family and pro 2nd amendment (and pro Trump for that matter) and nobody here seemed to care. It's unclear exactly what happened in New Hampshire. Some want to blame the immigrants, but we (again unless I missed it) don't have an actual breakdown of how they voted, and hispanics in some states (like Tennessee) lean far more republican than others (obviously). Why? Who knows?
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