Survey Shows Asian Americans Could Play Key Role in Presidential Election

Nguoi-viet.com, news report, staff, Posted: Oct 15, 2008

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Among Asian American voters, many are supporting presidential candidate Barack Obama, but another sizable portion remains undecided a development that could set the stage for Asian Americans to play a pivotal role in the outcome of the election, according to a new national survey released this week.

This groundbreaking study was conducted by researchers from four leading universities: Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey; University of California, Berkeley (UC Berkeley); University of California, Riverside (UC Riverside); and the University of Southern California (USC).

The researchers’ 2008 National Asian American Survey (NAAS) shows that 41 percent of Asian Americans are likely to favor Obama, while 24 percent support John McCain. In battleground states, where either candidate could win on Election Day, Obama leads with 43 percent of Asian Americans supporting him and 22 percent favoring McCain.

Researchers point out that a key finding of the study is the high proportion of undecided Asian American likely voters: 34 percent. Among the general population, national polls conducted since the major party conventions show that undecided voters are approximately 8 percent of the electorate.

Karthick Ramakrishnan, an associate professor of political science at UC Riverside, points out that ''with such a high proportion of undecided voters, Asian Americans are a critical source of potential votes for either candidate in the final weeks of the campaign.

''Even in battleground states and among those Asian Americans who were interviewed in the second half of September, more than 30 percent were undecided between Barack Obama and John McCain,'' he says.

The multi-ethnic, multi-lingual survey of more than 4,000 Asian Americans likely to vote in the election was conducted from Aug. 18 to Sept. 26. It is the most comprehensive survey to date of the political views of Asian Americans, with interviews conducted in English, Vietnamese, Cantonese, Mandarin, Hindi, Japanese, Korean and Tagalog.

Janelle Wong, an associate professor of political science at USC, says that 'most national polls cannot report the preferences of these likely voters because they do not interview in multiple languages, and the number of interviews they conduct among Asian Americans is very small.

By drawing on the knowledge of political scientists with expertise in survey research and ethnic politics, and with support from several foundations, the NAAS data provide insight about Asian Americans as a whole, the researchers say, as well as about their six largest ethnic subgroups: Asian Indians, Chinese, Filipinos, Japanese, Koreans and Vietnamese.

The research shows that support for the candidates does vary by Asian American ethnic groups. Among those who have made up their mind on a candidate, two-thirds of Vietnamese Americans support McCain; Japanese Americans, Chinese Americans, and Indian Americans support Obama by more than a three-to-one ratio; and Korean and Filipino Americans who are likely voters also support Obama over McCain, but the gap is much smaller, with ratios less than 1.4 to 1.

Many of the differences can be attributed to party affiliation, according to the researchers. Vietnamese Americans identify with the Republican Party over the Democratic Party by nearly a two-to-one ratio, while the opposite is true for other ethnic groups such as Indian Americans and Chinese Americans.

Still, as UC Berkeley associate professor of political science Taeku Lee says, ''A very large number of Asian Americans are non-partisan. The Asian American vote is very much up for grabs: Non-partisans who see either the Democratic or Republican party as closer to them on issues that matter to them are much likelier to vote for that party’s candidate.''

Among the survey’s other findings:

The majority of Asian Americans who voted in the primary supported Hillary Clinton over Obama by a nearly 2 to 1 margin, but 59 percent of Clinton supporters now plan to vote for Obama and 10 percent support McCain.

About 80 percent of likely voters who are Asian American list the economy as one of the most important problems the nation faces, followed by the war in Iraq. On both issues, there are strongly divided opinions between Obama and McCain supporters.

''Even as the Iraq war has receded from the headlines as concerns about the economy have become more prominent, the war still plays a powerful role in the Asian American choice for president,'' says Jane Junn, an associate professor of political science at Rutgers.

Overall, 32 percent of all Asian Americans identify themselves as Democrats; 14 percent as Republicans; 19 percent as independents; and 35 percent as nonpartisan, not fitting into any of the major party categories.

One third of Asian American citizens get informed about politics from Asian-language television and newspapers, and more than one in four (28 percent) say they will use Asian-language ballot materials.

Next to Latinos, Asian Americans are the fastest growing share of the U.S. population. Currently, they comprise 5 percent of the population and, according to the researchers, will likely play a significant role in battleground states such as Virginia, Nevada and Washington, where they account for 5 percent or more of the population. Even in states such as Colorado, Ohio and Florida, where they are less numerous, Asian Americans may provide the margin of victory, the researchers said.

The full NAAS report, including information on the survey methodology used, is posted online at: www.naasurvey.com


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Alison Tyndall (Asian) on Oct 18, 2008 at 18:56:30 said:

Its in the best interest of the Asian American community to vote regardless of their party affiliation to give more voice and rights power to the asian community. We have been under-represented for too long. With that said it is in the interest of all people in the U.S. and around the globe to vote for Senator Obama. Senator Mccain and Sarah Palin are extremist racists and they will do unthinkable damage to the Asian communities. If the Republican campaign is passing out fliers that has Obama eating watermellons and chickens, monkeys, and nooses, what is in store for Asians and other ethnicities I don't even want to think about it. Mccain has said in the past "we will be in deep kim-chee" and Palin's husband is radical extremist Libertarian who wanted to make Alaska separate nation from the U.S.A. so he doesn't have to pay taxes and separate himself just to his own kind of people. We will give up our freedom and rights with Mccain in the office. Also we will become alot poorer where Mccain only wants to give tax cuts to the rich with the low 15%capital gains tax, secretly tax the middle-class with his vouchers for healthcare, and he will try with all his might to take away medicare and social security. Folks Mccain is dumber and scarier than the Bush. Don't fall for their evil tricks.

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