Jewish vote information :
(source not noted)
 
 
Exit polls from Tuesday's  midterms indicate the GOP is increasing its 
support among Jewish  voters.  _Exit  polls_ 
(http://www.pewforum.org/2014/11/05/how-the-faithful-voted-2014-preliminary-analysis/)
  report that 33% of 
Jewish voters supported Republican candidates  while 66% went to the Democrats. 
In 2006 (the last midterm exit polls that  sampled enough Jewish voters to 
be analyzed) only 12% of Jewish voters selected  Republican candidates 
(largely because of opposition to the Iraq war). 
According to the _Republican Jewish  Coalition_ 
(http://www.rjchq.org/2014/11/congratulations-to-the-jewish-republican-winners-of-2014/)
  the 2014 GOP 
Jewish vote was historic: 
Since 1982, the historical average for the GOP in mid-term  elections among 
Jewish voters has been 26%. The range has a low of 18% in 1982  and a high 
of 33% this year. In each of the last two midterm elections,  Republicans 
got more than 30% of the Jewish vote.
One reason for change in  allegiance may be that Republicans are more 
supportive of Israel than  Democrats. _A recent  Pew_ 
(http://www.people-press.org/2014/07/15/as-mideast-violence-continues-a-wide-partisan-gap-in-israel-pale
stinian-sympathies/)  study conducted during the first week of Operation 
Protective Edge  (7/8-14) and released on Tuesday reports support for Israel 
among Americans  remains strong. What has changed is the gap between 
Republican Party supporters  (73%) and Democratic Party supporters (44%) is 
wider 
than  ever. 

 
 
 
 
Analysis: Republicans Won by Doing Better Among  Non-Whites, Less 
Religious, Unmarried, Young

 
 
By _Napp Nazworth_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/napp-nazworth/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter
November 7,  2014

 
 
Some pundits have described the 2014 midterms as a base-turnout election,  
arguing that Republicans did a better job than Democrats turning out their 
base  voters. The exit polls do not support this view, however. 
The Republican base turned out at about the same rate as in 2012. 
Republicans  won most their races on Tuesday by expanding its base with 
demographic 
groups  that voted Democrat in 2012. 
Race and Ethnicity 
Whites were about the same portion of the electorate and voted Republican 
at  about the same rate as they did in 2012. They were 72 percent of the 
electorate  and 59 percent of them voted Republican in 2012; in 2014 they were 
75 percent of  the electorate and 60 percent voted Republican. 
Among non-whites, on the other hand, Republicans saw significant gains 
since  2012. They gained three percentage points among blacks, nine percentage 
points  among Latinos, and 24 percentage points among Asians, who gave half 
of their  votes to Republicans. 
(All analyses used CNN exit polls for presidential vote choice in 2012 and  
House vote choice in 2014. To ensure accuracy, comparisons were made with 
other  exit polls.)
 
Religion 
The Republican base of white Evangelicals, white Catholics and those who  
attend religious services often turned out at about the same rate and voted  
Republican at about the same rate as they did in 2012. 
This year, white Evangelicals were 26 percent of the electorate and 78  
percent of them voted Republican, which is exactly the same as in 2014.  
Similarly, white Catholics voting patterns remained the same as in 2012 (19  
percent of the electorate with 60 percent voting Republican). 
Similarly, those who attend religious services weekly or more turned out at 
 about the same rate and voted Republican at about the same rate as they 
did in  2012. And, those who never attend religious services turned out at 
about the  same rate and voted Democrat at about the same rate as they did in 
2012. 
This big difference for Republicans this year is how they did among the  
slightly religious. Those who said they attend religious services monthly or a 
 few times a year (40 percent of the electorate in both years) favored 
Democrats  in 2012 (55 percent) and favored Republicans in 2014 (52 percent). 
Marriage and Gender 
While the media often talks about the "gender gap" (Republicans have more  
support among men and Democrats have more support among women), a larger  
partisan difference can be found in the "marriage gap" (Republicans have more  
support from those who are married and Democrats have more support from 
those  who are single). 
The Republican base of married voters did not change much. In 2012, married 
 voters were 60 percent of the electorate and 56 percent of them voted  
Republican. In 2014, married voters were 63 percent of the electorate and 58  
percent of them voted Republican. Among unmarried voters, on the other hand,  
Republicans gained seven percentage points, from 35 to 42 percent. 
Combining marriage with gender, Republicans gained eight percentage points  
among unmarried men (40 to 48 percent), and seven percentage points among  
unmarried women (31 to 38 percent). 
Age 
The one area where a case could be made that base turnout made a difference 
 is among young voters, but even here the effect was small. The bigger 
problem  for Democrats was not that young voters did not show up, but that they 
did not  vote Democrat at a high enough rate. Republicans gained six 
percentage points  among young (18 to 29-year-old) voters, from 37 percent in 
2012 
to 43 percent in  2014. 
The drop in young voter participation rate was six percentage points, from 
19  to 13 percent of the electorate. But much of that drop was among the 
young white  voters (from 11 to eight percent of the electorate), who favored 
Republicans in  2012 (51 percent) and in 2014 (54 percent). 
Among young blacks, whose share of the electorate went from three to two  
percent, Republicans gained three percentage points (eight to 11 percent). 
And  among young Latinos, whose share of the electorate went from four to two  
percent, Republicans gained five percentage points (23 to 28  percent).

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