< class="bt_bb_headline_tag">EconomyHispanic VotersWhit AyresWorking Class Voters
Hispanic and African American weakness is a function of a memory of the Trump economy being better" subheadline="<span class="btArticleDate">November 1, 2024</span>" font="" font_weight="bold" font_size="" color_scheme="" color="" align="" url="" target="_self" html_tag="h1" size="extralarge" dash="" el_id="" el_class="" el_style="" supertitle_position="outside" ignore_fe_editor="true"]

However, the Republican pollster Whit Ayres told me that he is seeing the same
divergence between slipping non-white support and steady white backing for Harris in his surveys—and he sees good reasons for that pattern potentially persisting through Election Day. “The Hispanic and African American weakness [for Harris] is a function of a memory of the Trump economy being better for people who live paycheck to paycheck than the Biden-Harris economy,” Ayres said. “On the other hand, there are far more white voters who will be voting based on abortion and the future of democracy. There’s a certain rationale behind those numbers, because they are making decisions based on different issues.”

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