This year’s voters are diverse, young and unusually divided, according to national exit polls.
Overall, the 2012 electorate that voted for Obama looked quite similar to 2008, with high turnout among minorities and young people, although voters were distinctly polarized along racial lines.
About three out of four of all voters were white, according to national exit polls, matching the turnout from 2008. Obama’s support among white voters fell to 39%, however, a four-point drop from his first presidential run.
In fact, the 39% figure is lower than the share of white voters won by John Kerry or Al Gore—suggesting an electorate that is now more polarized along racial lines than in several recent campaigns.
And in a year when Democrats cast GOP positions on abortion, rape and medical care as a “war on women,” Obama lost white women by 14 points, double the deficit from 2008, when he lost the same group to McCain by seven points.
The same polarized dynamic was evident in the overwhelmingly lopsided support for Obama among racial minorities this year.
Obama beat Romney by 40 points among Latinos—a margin that eclipsed Obama’s 2008 edge in that group by 3 points. The lead was especially pivotal because Latino turnout is growing nationwide, jumping 25% from 2004 to this year, when one out of 10 voters were Latino.
African-American voters matched their above-average turnout of 13% in 2008. Obama’s support among African-Americans held strong, dropping just two points from 2008 to 93%. (That figure reflects a longtime loyalty to the Democratic Party, a trend that held steady before the election of a black president.) Meanwhile, among Asian-Americans, who made up 3% of the electorate, Obama won by a staggering 49 points.
According to one veteran Democratic campaign operative, these racial divisions predate Obama and will endure well beyond his presidency.
This year’s voting patterns “would largely be the same for a white Democratic President,” argued the operative, who didn’t want to speak on the record about racial polarization on election night.









