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			 The percentage of Republicans among those likely to vote in the 
			Nov. 8, 2016, election lags Democrats by 9 percentage points, 
			compared with a 6-point deficit in the year leading up to Obama’s 
			2012 victory, according to an analysis of Reuters/Ipsos polling data 
			from 2012 and 2015. 
			 
			While the American electorate has become more diverse the last three 
			years, the party’s support among Hispanic likely voters and younger 
			likely voters has shrunk significantly. 
			 
			Polling data on likely voters who identify as members of a 
			particular political party are considered valuable indicators of 
			election outcomes. In 2012, 93 percent of voters who identified as 
			members of a particular party cast a ballot for that party’s 
			presidential candidate, a Reuters/Ipsos Election Day poll found. 
			 
			The numbers suggest the Republican field, led by billionaire 
			businessman Donald Trump, faces strong headwinds against the 
			Democrats, led by former secretary of state Hillary Clinton. 
			 
			"Good candidates running good campaigns can overcome partisan 
			disadvantages,” Republican pollster and strategist Neil Newhouse 
			said. “The party faced these same challenges in 2012 and is still 
			facing those challenges, and it is potentially more significant.” 
			
			  An analysis of the Reuters/Ipsos polling data found: 
			 
			- In 2012, Democrats made up 44.7 percent of party-affiliated likely 
			voters, compared to 39.1 percent Republicans, a difference of about 
			6 percentage points, according to the analysis of 87,778 likely 
			presidential voters polled leading up to the 2012 presidential 
			election. The results have a credibility interval of plus or minus 
			0.3 percentage points. 
			 
			- Three years later, that lead had grown to nine points, 45.9 
			percent to 36.9 percent, according to the analysis of 93,181 likely 
			presidential voters polled in 2015. The results in 2015 have the 
			same credibility interval as 2012. 
			 
			- Among Hispanics who are likely presidential voters, the percentage 
			affiliated with the Republican Party has slipped nearly five points, 
			from 30.6 percent in 2012 to 26 percent in 2015. Meanwhile, Hispanic 
			Democrats grew by six percentage points to 59.6 percent. 
			 
			- Among whites under 40, the shift is even more dramatic. In 2012, 
			they were more likely to identify with the Republican Party by about 
			5 percentage points. In 2015, the advantage flipped: Young whites 
			are now more likely to identify with the Democratic Party by about 8 
			percentage points. 
			 
			- Meanwhile, black likely voters remain overwhelmingly Democratic, 
			at about 80 percent. 
			 
			BREAD AND BUTTER VOTERS 
			 
			For both parties, the election will partly hinge, as always, on 
			getting out the votes, Newhouse said. But for a Republican to win, 
			the gap in party membership means their voters need to show up at a 
			much higher rate than Democratic voters. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			In November 2014, Republican voters did just that with dramatic 
			congressional victories that allowed the GOP to take control of the 
			U.S. Senate and solidify its control of the U.S. House of 
			Representatives. Those gains, during a low-turnout midterm election, 
			were fueled by turnout among older white voters. 
			 
			Ari Fleischer was co-author of “Growth and Opportunity Project,” the 
			Republican postmortem of Romney’s 2012 loss which concluded that the 
			party had to connect with minorities, especially Asians and 
			Hispanics, and the young. 
			 
			“If our Party is not welcoming and inclusive, young people and 
			increasingly other voters will continue to tune us out,” the authors 
			wrote. 
			 
			
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			A former press secretary to President George W. Bush, Fleischer said 
			Republicans' "bread and butter" support comes from a powerful and 
			growing block of voters: whites over 55. The numbers bear that out. 
			
			Aging baby boomers likely to vote in a presidential election remain 
			strongly Republican, up slightly to 47.7 percent of voters polled in 
			2015. The share of that group who identify as Democrats slipped 
			nearly two points to 35.4 percent in 2015. 
			 
			DIVERSE FIELD 
			 
			An irony is that the Republican presidential field is younger and 
			more diverse than the Democratic contenders. It includes Hispanics 
			Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, both in their mid-40s; two business people 
			- Trump and a woman, Carly Fiorina; and a retired neurosurgeon, Ben 
			Carson, who is black. 
			 
			All three Democratic candidates are white and long-time politicians, 
			though Clinton, the front-runner, is a woman. 
			 
			Republican Senator Dean Heller of Nevada said the rhetoric coming 
			from some of his party’s candidates is dampening any hope their 
			message will resonate beyond the party’s base. 
			 
			Heller, who has endorsed former Florida Governor Jeb Bush for the 
			Republican nomination, noted Bush's brother George W. Bush got about 
			40 percent of the Hispanic vote in 2004 while Romney got just 28 
			percent in 2012. 
			 
			“So it is possible for a Republican candidate to do well with the 
			Hispanic community,” Heller said. “And we have to do better or we’re 
			not going to win this presidential race.” 
			 
			Carlos Firpi is a 31-year-old Hispanic voter and a Republican. 
			Earlier this year, he considered himself a Trump supporter. No 
			longer. 
			  
			
			
			  
			
			“Now I don’t know who to support,” said the computer technician from 
			Carlisle, Pennsylvania. “Unfortunately, all I seem to hear anymore 
			from anyone in the Republican Party is extremism.“ 
			 
			Firpi said he is naturally drawn to the party’s emphasis on 
			self-reliance and a limited role for government. And he remains a 
			Republican but also understands why Hispanics and young voters would 
			feel alienated. “It concerns me, too.” 
			 
			Former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele said 
			the party needs to reach out to minority groups between campaign 
			cycles. 
			 
			“It’s not something you get done in one cycle; it’s not something 
			you get done in two cycles. It’s something that’s done over time,” 
			he said after watching December's Republican debate in Las Vegas. 
			 
			(Editing by Howard Goller) 
			
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] 
			Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
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