Republicans in the Texas Legislature are prepared to pass a series of new voting restrictions, and they're justifying it using unsubstantiated .
Opponents of the bills, and some experts on voting behavior, say it is an attempt to suppress the votes of Black and brown voters 鈥 people more likely to vote for Democrats.
鈥淚n order for the Republicans to really prevent what鈥檚 coming down the road, unfortunately, they are positioning themselves to just roll it back to Jim Crow, basically,鈥 political scientist Michael McDonald .
New voting data from the U.S. Census provide a small hint at "what鈥檚 coming down the road" in Texas.
Who Voted?
On the whole, the Lone Star State saw a significant increase in voting from 2016 to 2020. Despite a long-held belief among Democrats that Texas wasn鈥檛 a Republican state but a every statewide Republican candidate won handily in 2020, although former President Trump had the closest presidential result .
Part of the story is that both voters of color and white voters increased their numbers over 2016.
Pieces of the Pie
The white share of the electorate declined slightly in 2020, to 57.1% from 58.9% in 2012. Hispanic voters in 2020 represented more than a quarter of all people who cast a ballot.
But the increase in Hispanic voting was not a smooth, consistent ascent. The 2016 election saw both Hispanic and Black voters decrease a bit as a share of the electorate. Asian voters, meanwhile, steadily increased their share each presidential cycle, to about 4% of the electorate in 2020.
Getting Out the Vote
One area where the trend is more consistent is in the percentage of eligible voters who actually vote in presidential elections in Texas. Hispanic, white and Asian voters all boosted their turnout rate from 2012 to 2016 and then again from 2016 to 2020.
Black voters saw a decrease in their turnout rate in 2016, but rebounded somewhat in 2020.
These charts don鈥檛 reveal an inevitable road to Democratic victory in Texas, particularly after a surprisingly strong showing by the GOP in heavily-Latino South Texas in 2020. Still, an showed white voters without a college degree occupying a decreasing share of the electorate, including in Texas. Those voters .
鈥淭he underlying demographics of the nation鈥檚 voter population show that Democratic-leaning voter populations are on the rise in both fast-growing and slow-growing parts of the country,鈥 wrote William H. Frey, a senior fellow at Brookings and the study鈥檚 author.