It’s official: The effort to block African-Americans’ path to the voting booth in 2012 backfired, and then some.
For the first time in history, black voters turned out at a higher rate than non-Hispanic whites last fall, according to a new Census Bureau report released Wednesday. The report found that 66.2% of African-Americans voted, an increase of 1.8 million from 2008. White turnout was 64.1 million, a drop-off from 2008 of around 2 million (see chart below).
Blacks also “outperformed” as a percentage of the electorate. They made up 12% of eligible voters, but 13% of the electorate.
Minorities made up an unprecedented 26% of the electorate, and carried President Obama to victory, allowing him to defeat Mitt Romney by a clear margin despite receiving just 38% of the white vote. Over 90% of African-American voters supported President Obama.
African-American political activists have said since the election that the slew of voting restrictions targeting their community—photo ID laws, cuts to early voting, and purges of voter rolls—only increased blacks’ determination to exercise their rights.









