|
|
 |
APIAs Vote in Record Numbers November 2
Unprecedented Number of APIAs Voting and Organizing Toward Last
Stretch to Turn Out and Protect the APIAVote
Release by APIAVote
Washington, DC – November 2 - With a few hours left before the polls
close, Asian Pacific Islander Americans (APIAs) are tirelessly
mobilizing to ensure eligible voters are educated on important issues
affecting the community and vote at their polls today. An unprecedented
number of APIAs have already cast their ballots via early and absentee
voting, and millions more will race to the polls by today’s end,
including legions of newly registered APIA voters.
Expecting an exponential population increase over the next decade,
APIAs are gaining national political clout. This election cycle the
APIA community is exhibiting unparalleled excitement and proving to be a
local force in several precincts and counties where the APIA population
grows, registers and votes in states like Washington, Nevada Minnesota,
Oregon, and Michigan.
In the last few weeks, local APIAVote coalitions in Seattle, Las
Vegas, Minneapolis, and Portland phone banked over 40,000 APIAs, mailed
more than 30,000 reminder postcards, held candidate and issue forums in
the community, distributed election guides, voter bill of rights, and
canvassed thousands of additional households this weekend as volunteers
door knocked, literature dropped, and absentee ballot dropped. Today,
massive GOTV efforts continue with phone banking operations and
transportation programs sending APIAs to the polls.
In Ann Arbor, APIAVote youth partners, the APIA Greek Alliance,
National Asian American Student Conference, and South Asian American
Voting Youth lead the voting outreach effort at the University of
Michigan, where APIA youth voter interest in the election swells.
Groups coordinated with campus organizations to throw issue forums, dorm
storms, phone bank, and mobilize a massive Get-Out-The-Vote campaign to
change the state of APIA youth political participation.
Additionally, over 600 hundred Asian Pacific Islander American
lawyers, students, and community volunteers nation-wide monitor
elections in Illinois, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Virginia for Asian-language ballots,
interpreters and other voting materials required under section 203 of
the Voting Rights Act, anti-Asian voter discrimination, and proper
implementation of HAVA's new voter identification and verification
requirements.
Evolution of the Asian American
Presidential Vote
Three early exit polls, each
purporting to be national polls, paint different pictures.
All have certain sampling limitations and regional emphases; and
poll reporting does not indicate if Pacific Islanders, Native
Hawaiians, and Multiracial Asian Americans are included.
2000 Exit Polls:
55% Gore, 41% Bush New
California Media September 2004 Opinion Poll:
43% Kerry - 36% Bush - 20% Undecided
2004 Edison/Mitofsky Exit Poll:
56% Kerry - 44% Bush
2004 CNN Exit Poll:
61% Kerry
2004 LA Times Exit Poll:
64% Kerry - 34% Bush
|
“The APIAVote campaign has been igniting the APIA community by
educating, motivating, and registering APIA voters through our national
and local partners since 1996. Today, the APIA community is poised to
swing elections as millions of APIAs are voting with heightened interest
in the political process,” said Janelle Hu, APIAVote National Director.
“We are no longer a discounted community as political parties and the
media are looking to the APIA vote.“
Other Readings of Interest
-
National Poll on Asian American Voters Shows Large Undecideds,
Record Interest
Release by APIAVote.org
Poll by New California Media shows APAs favor Kerry,
but 20% remain undecided; jobs, economy
top concerns; most say 2004 may be "most important election of my
lifetime"
-
Asian Pacific Americans, Polls and the 2004 Election
By CN Le, Asian-Nation
In the barrage of election polls, it behooves us to recall the old
saying: There are lies, there are damn lies, and then there are
statistics
-
Minorities Backed Kerry
Reported by Jim Lobe at Inter Press Service News Agency
Minority communities on Tuesday continued their trend of backing the
Democratic candidate in the presidential vote, but re-elected George
W Bush recorded several sizeable gains among many groups, according
to the latest exit polls. [In new window]
APIAVote is a national coalition of non-partisan nonprofit
organizations that encourages civic participation and promotes a better
understanding of public policy and the electoral process among the Asian
and Pacific Islander American community. The national APIAVote partners
are APIA Greek Alliance, Asian American Legal Defense and Education
Fund, Asian American Online, Asian Pacific American Institute for
Congressional Studies, Asian Pacific American Labor Alliance, Hmong
National Development, National Asian American Student Conference,
National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum, National Coalition for
Asian Pacific American Community Development, National Congress of
Vietnamese Americans, National Korean American Service and Education
Consortium, Organization of Chinese Americans, Sikh Mediawatch and
Resource Task Force, South Asian American Voting Youth. APIAVote
was founded in 1996 and maintains its headquarters in Washington, D.C. |