One of the polls cited in
538's Pollapalooza for this week ("What Happens When Americans Don’t Trust Institutions?") has some interesting racial crosstabs for Latino and AAPI Americans.
Sixty-three percent of Americans were worried about their individual financial outlook in the short-term future, according to a June 23-27 survey from Navigator Research. White Americans (69 percent) appeared to be the most concerned, although Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders weren’t far behind (64 percent). Meanwhile, a smaller share of Hispanic Americans (51 percent) and Black Americans (44 percent) reported feeling uneasy in this regard. This split among racial and ethnic groups is consistent among Americans when it comes to their overall opinions on the current economy: White Americans (83 percent) expressed the most pessimism about the economy, followed by Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders (79 percent), Hispanic Americans (68 percent) and Black Americans (61 percent).
For whatever reason, the Hispanic crosstab became more upbeat on the state of the US economy (-46 to -36 from June 13 to June 27), while the AAPI crosstab became more pessimistic (-46 to -61 in that timeframe). Probably more of a sample size issue than anything, but still noteworthy.
Global Strategy Group conducted public opinion surveys among a sample of 1,200 registered voters from June 23-June 27, 2022. 105 additional interviews were conducted among Hispanic voters. 74 additional interviews were conducted among Asian American and Pacific Islander voters. 105 additional interviews were conducted among African American voters. 105 additional interviews were conducted among independent voters.
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The AAPI crosstab was also more pro-Biden/pro-Dems than the Hispanic crosstab on issues like "being on the side of working people", "looking out for people like me", "jobs/economy", and inflation.
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