Latinos in the 2010 Elections: Arizona
There are 766,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Arizona, 18% of all eligible voters in the state.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Rapid growth is the overriding characteristic of the Hispanic population, but that growth comes in many forms. The Center’s demographic reports focus on the current and projected growth of the Latino population, trends in immigration, unauthorized migration, countries of origin of U.S. Latinos, regional patterns of settlement and related factors.
Also see our statistical portraits, state and county databases, demographic profiles and Census 2010 tables for data on the characteristics of the Latino and foreign-born populations in the United States.
There are 766,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Arizona, 18% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 5.4 million eligible Hispanic voters in California, 24% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 434,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Colorado, 13% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 202,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Connecticut, 8% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 16,000 eligible Hispanic voters in the District of Columbia, 4% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 1.8 million eligible Hispanic voters in Florida, 15% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 178,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Georgia, 3% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 62,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Hawaii, 7% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 749,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Illinois, 8% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 116,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Indiana, 2% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 113,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Maryland, 3% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 256,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Massachusetts, 6% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 183,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Michigan, 2% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 224,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Nevada, 14% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 645,000 eligible Hispanic voters in New Jersey, 11% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 525,000 eligible Hispanic voters in New Mexico, 38% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 1.6 million eligible Hispanic voters in New York, 12% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 138,000 eligible Hispanic voters in North Carolina, 2% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 140,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Ohio, 2% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 125,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Oregon, 5% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 289,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Pennsylvania, 3% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 46,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Rhode Island, 6% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 3.8 million eligible Hispanic voters in Texas, 25% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 104,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Utah, 6% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 183,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Virginia, 3% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 217,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Washington, 5% of all eligible voters in the state.
There are 106,000 eligible Hispanic voters in Wisconsin, 3% of all eligible voters in the state.
Map showing U.S. Latino voters by state, as well as by percentage of eligible voters in each congressional district during 2008 elections.
An estimated 340,000 of the 4.3 million babies born in the United States in 2008 were the offspring of unauthorized immigrants, according to a new analysis of Census Bureau data.
Native-born Latinos are more likely than their foreign-born counterparts to go online and to use cell phones, according to a new report from the Pew Hispanic Center.