Profile of a Cliffhanger: Gender and race war?
U.S. SENATE / VIRGINIA / EXIT POLL
2,011 Respondents
Updated: 2:21 a.m.
VOTE BY GENDER
TOTAL-Male Female
Allen 55% 45%
Webb 45% 55%
VOTE BY RACE AND GENDER
TOTAL White Men
Allen 62%
Webb 38%
White Women
Allen 53%
Webb 47%
Non-White Men
Allen 25%
Webb 75%
Non-White Women
Allen 18%
Webb 86%
TOTAL
African-American
Allen 15%
Webb 85%
Latino * *
Asian
Allen 32%
Webb 82%
VOTE BY INCOME
TOTAL-proportion of sampe in paren.
Under $15,000 (5%)
Allen 36%
Webb 64%
$15-30,000 (7%)
Allen 41%
Webb 59%
$30-50,000 (16%)
Allen 51%
Webb 49%
$50-75,000 (22%)
Allen 52%
Webb 48%
$75-100,000 (17%)
Allen 59%
Webb 41%
$100-150,000 (17%)
Allen 50%
Webb 50%
$150-200,000 (9%)
Allen 44%
Webb 56%
$200,000 or More (8%)
Allen 45%
Webb55%
2,011 Respondents
Updated: 2:21 a.m.
VOTE BY GENDER
TOTAL-Male Female
Allen 55% 45%
Webb 45% 55%
VOTE BY RACE AND GENDER
TOTAL White Men
Allen 62%
Webb 38%
White Women
Allen 53%
Webb 47%
Non-White Men
Allen 25%
Webb 75%
Non-White Women
Allen 18%
Webb 86%
TOTAL
African-American
Allen 15%
Webb 85%
Latino * *
Asian
Allen 32%
Webb 82%
VOTE BY INCOME
TOTAL-proportion of sampe in paren.
Under $15,000 (5%)
Allen 36%
Webb 64%
$15-30,000 (7%)
Allen 41%
Webb 59%
$30-50,000 (16%)
Allen 51%
Webb 49%
$50-75,000 (22%)
Allen 52%
Webb 48%
$75-100,000 (17%)
Allen 59%
Webb 41%
$100-150,000 (17%)
Allen 50%
Webb 50%
$150-200,000 (9%)
Allen 44%
Webb 56%
$200,000 or More (8%)
Allen 45%
Webb55%
1 Comments:
Very interesting data, thanks. What do you make of the (bell?) curve among voters broken out by income categories? One might expect higher support for the GOP conservative among highest income levels, rather than declining.
The whole debate over tax rates (middle v. upper class) seems disconnected from the self-interest of the respective groups outside the under $30K and the $75-100K batches.
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