US Here's Why Asian Americans Shifted Right - An alliance is emerging. And both Democrats and Republicans should pay attention.

Article Archive

related: https://kiwifarms.st/threads/bay-ar...-have-been-led-by-asian-americans-why.170656/
https://kiwifarms.st/threads/why-chinese-americans-have-shifted-rightward.206601/

1762218377983.jpeg

Nationally, 2020 and 2024 exit polls from the Washington Post show a 9-point shift to the Republicans in the presidential race among Asian American voters relative to 2020. In some states, such as Nevada and Texas, the polls suggest that Trump won the Asian American vote outright. The NBC News exit poll found a 5-point shift to the right nationally among Asian Americans relative to 2020. And in their survey of Asian American voters prior to the election, Asian Americans Advancing Justice saw a 7-point shift away from the Democrats relative to 2020.

Exit polls are far from perfect measures of voting behavior, though. A spokesperson for APIAVote, a group that focuses on encouraging Asian American political engagement, pointed out when asked for comment that the exit polls may not be a “representative sample of the Asian American electorate.” For instance, the exit polls were not conducted in any Asian languages, which would preclude some Asian American voters with poor English skills from participating.

My analysis of precinct-level voting data in four major urban areas shows that the exit polls may actually be understating the degree to which Asian Americans shifted to the right. Using census data, I identified majority-Asian precincts in these areas and compared the Republican margin of victory (or loss) between the 2024 and 2020 elections. The results are much more stark: Majority-Asian precincts in New York City, for instance, saw a rightward shift of 31 percentage points. Precincts in Dallas and Fort Bend counties in Texas both saw rightward shifts between 17 and 20 points. And precincts in Chicago saw a 23-point shift to the right.

If the rightward shift among Asian American voters is real and significant, what is behind it?

When asked, neither APIAVote nor Asian Americans Advancing Justice were able to provide an explanation. But several Republican-leaning Asian American voters I spoke with were not surprised by the shift.

“I had so many [South] Asians, who are registered Democrats, let me know specifically that they voted for TRUMP this year,” South Asian Coalition Chairwoman for New Jersey’s Republican Party Priti Pandya-Patel said. “I believe most were always ‘closet Republicans’ and now they are starting to come out.”

The economy

The voters I spoke with repeatedly mentioned a few key reasons why they and others they knew voted for Trump this election. The first was a dissatisfaction with the Democrats’ handling of the economy, particularly inflation.

Many of us expressed discontent towards Biden’s energy policies that skyrocketed the costs of grocery prices and gas prices,” Nevada voter Lisa Noeth said. “Las Vegas specifically is like an island in the middle of the desert, the increase of fuel costs trickled down to the pockets of consumers at the grocery stores with goods being transported from California to Las Vegas.”

Rudy Pamintuan, chief of staff for Nevada’s lieutenant governor, said inflation was tough on Asian American entrepreneurs. “Many households had to take an extra part-time job to make ends meet.”

The data backs up Noeth and Pamintuan’s perceptions. John Yang, president and executive director of Asian Americans Advancing Justice, said economic-related concerns, healthcare, and housing costs were some of the top issues the organization found in its 2024 survey of Asian Americans. And a July AAPI Data survey indicated that Asian Americans thought Republicans had a slight edge on handling inflation over Democrats.

Public safety

While voters across all racial and ethnic lines felt the impacts of inflation, Asian Americans grew dissatisfied with poor Democratic leadership on crime and safety in major cities. As disorder grew after the pandemic, Asian Americans soured on Democrats as they watched their quality of life decrease. Asra Nomani, author of “Woke Army,” said many Asian Americans felt “unprotected amid rising violence and harassment.”

In New York City, a 2023 survey found substantial portions of Asian Americans adopted some kind of “avoidance behavior” to deal with crime – 48% avoided going out late at night, and 41% avoided taking public transportation. Meanwhile, Democrat-run city governments have taken more relaxed approach to handling crime, even spending thousands of dollars to protect criminals by humanizing them as “justice-impacted individuals.”

“You only understand what you signed up for after they [Democrats] win and you have to put up with crime and squalor,” Pennsylvania voter Teesta Dasgupta said.

Asian Americans increasingly oppose soft-on-crime policies. The majority of Asian Americans in California supported the passage of Proposition 36, which imposes harsher penalties for certain types of crimes. A disproportionate Asian American voter base also recalled former San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin, who infamously declined to prosecute the murder of an elderly Thai immigrant as a hate crime and instead chalked it up to a “temper tantrum” of the perpetrator.

‘Wrong side of brown’

Asian American voters also told me that they were turned off by the Democrats’ racial equity policies. The Democratic Party heavily leaned into racial equity following George Floyd’s death and the riots that followed in 2020. Democrats made bold promises to reduce racial disparities in economic and other outcomes, arguing that current racial disparities are the result of decades of systemic discrimination that must be addressed. However, race-conscious policies like affirmative action often ended up pitting Asian Americans against other minority groups. For many Asian Americans, they end up on the “wrong side of brown,” as Nomani puts it.

Noeth told me that Asian American parents were “fed up” with affirmative action policies in school admissions. Sue Ghosh Stricklett, a former Trump administration appointee, said the Harvard affirmative action case and the removal of merit-based admissions at Thomas Jefferson High School in Virginia both “ignited passionate activism” among Asian American parents. In Fairfax County, Virginia, Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology changed its merit-based admissions policy in a bid to “decrease the representation of Asian Americans” in favor of other racial minorities.

“The injustice of being labeled as ‘privileged,’ ‘selfish,’ ‘cheaters,’ ‘overrepresented,’ ‘white adjacent,’ and ‘resource hoarders’ hurt very deeply,” Nomani, who is also a parent of a Thomas Jefferson graduate, said. It led to “political mobilization and a reconsideration of long-standing political loyalties.”

Is this a permanent shift?

According to the Asian Americans I spoke with, many factors will determine if the momentum remains.

Kenny Xu, author of “An Inconvenient Minority,” believes the growth to the right is limited.

“There is a definite ceiling in Asian American rightward support due to their highly educated demographics, and the tendency of highly educated people to vote Left.”

Dasgupta believes growth is dependent on messaging.

“If Dems move to the center, Asian Americans stay where they are right now but if the allegiance to gender ideology and soft on crime remains then they [Asian Americans] will move right.”

Pamintuan says engagement with Asian American voters “could make a difference between winning or losing” in tight races, particularly at the local level.

Time will tell if Asian Americans will fully shift right. But an alliance is emerging. And both Democrats and Republicans should pay attention.
 
I noticed when there was that attack on some Asian nail salon or something in Atlanta that was clearly a hate crime and it got treated like it was no big deal because the shooter made the guess the race game boring, it really troubled a lot of my Asian friends.

They are very bought into the eliteness of the Ivy+ colleges and the university world in general, which is why they were mad about affirmative action, but I think in that moment they started to realize that that elite was at least in part treacherous, lying about their true aims, and perhaps something worth displacing instead of joining.

It was an enormous redpill in rice form.
 
>groids assault Asians in the street, push them under subway trains and steal their shit constantly as they’re ’soft targets’
>awareness grows and media begins reporting
>shitlib leftards try to blame it on ‘white supremacy’, and not pantywaist soft-on-black-crime policies from dipshit judges installed by Democrats

Asians by and large aren’t fucking stupid and many of them (Chinese, Taiwanese, Vietnamese, Laotians, Cambodians, Hmong, Koreans etc) are painfully familiar with Communism’s many brutal slaughters. No wonder they reject the idea that being killed by nigs is whitey’s fault, and will turn away from political parties not addressing the actual problem.

They get viewed and treated as White, and therefore back the only party that even pretends to give a fuck about Whites. What a shocking revelation!
Imagine being an Asian kid who worked his ass off through high school to get a 4.0GPA and being rejected by multiple ivy leagues while lazy/weed-retarded blacks coast in.
IMG_5268.png
 
I noticed when there was that attack on some Asian nail salon or something in Atlanta that was clearly a hate crime and it got treated like it was no big deal because the shooter made the guess the race game boring, it really troubled a lot of my Asian friends.

The MSM won't mention this a lot to not hurt their narrative. The late Colin Flaherty used to talk about black on asian crime.
 
Maybe because Democrats shut up real quick about anti-Asian hate crimes when they could no longer deny that their pet niggers were the culprits.
Ackshually, CHUD! The “white supremacy” crisis the Democrat–media complex keeps shrieking about is more of a problem than anyone realizes. It even causes blacks to shoot up Korean hair salons. We have it on unimpeachable authority from this 2022 story:
1762220967560.png
The chairwoman of the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) blamed White supremacy for last week’s shooting at a Dallas Korean hair salon, but the suspect charged with carrying out the attack is Black.

1762221039733.png
Sounds crazy, but you don’t want to contradict Rep Joyce Beatty (D-OH). That would be racist, and she will frown hard in your direction.

“On Monday, three people in a Korean-owned hair salon in Dallas were gunned by yet another White supremacy replacement theorist,” Beatty said…

1762221062904.png
Barked the professional race-baiter:
“We are sick of the pipeline from racist rhetoric to racist violence.”

That means free speech must be abolished or people will get hurt.

Beatty must have been counting on the media to keep Jeremy Smith’s race from the public. He is the black guy who has been arrested for walking into the Hair World Salon in Dallas and opening fire with a rifle, wounding three.

Despite Smith’s politically inconvenient race, the FBI investigated the event as a hate crime, since he really seems to have a thing about Asians. Black on Asian violence has been out of control, much as the media hates to report on it.
https://xcancel.com/NotKennyRogers/status/1527480221544288256
1762221165308.png
 
The article is from November 21, 2024. Here's some newer ones. Feel free to find more.

May 2, 2025: NPR (Sarah McCammon): Asian American voters backed Trump in Nevada. Here's how they feel about him now (archive)
Pauline Lee is the daughter of immigrants who came to the United States as teenagers, with nothing.

"When they came here they were dirt poor," she recalled.

They worked entry-level jobs at first, before they both went on to study and build successful careers in California.

Lee is proud of her family's immigration stories — and the fact that they came to the U.S. legally.

"Illegal immigration is, for me, one of the biggest problems, because you're also giving these illegal immigrants a lot of our resources that should be retained for our own Americans," she said. "That's a real problem."

Lee, a retired attorney, is active in Republican politics in Nevada. About 6 in 10 Asian Americans in the state voted for President Trump over Democratic nominee Kamala Harris in November. That's a huge swing from four years earlier, when a little more than 6 in 10 Asian voters backed Joe Biden.

During his first 100 days in office, President Trump has taken steps to crack down on immigration and end diversity programs in higher education and the federal government. Those actions came on the heels of an election in which Trump expanded his support among nonwhite voters, including some groups directly affected by these policies.

Over lunch, Lee says many of her Asian American friends also appreciate Trump's rejection of diversity initiatives, commonly known as DEI.

"I'm going to say right now, I'm resentful as a parent that my kids have to do more than other kids to get into certain colleges," Lee said.

When her now-adult children were applying to college, Lee says counselors steered them away from the Ivy League, warning they'd be up against too many other top-performing Asian students.

Las Vegas City Councilwoman Francis Allen-Palenske has heard similar frustrations.

"I think most Asian people feel as though, when colleges go through this vetting process, that the ethnicity of the students should not be released, so that there is absolute parity in that discussion — true meritocracy, if there is such a thing," she said.

Allen-Palenske, whose mother came to the U.S. from South Korea, previously served as a Republican state lawmaker. She says the shift toward Republicans among Asian Americans in Nevada is also about economic issues.

"Gas prices, inflation, the ability to buy a home, particularly here in Southern Nevada, has changed over the last 15 years," Allen-Palenske explained. "Las Vegas was probably one of the best places in the country to come and purchase a home for $200,000 and home ownership was very attainable 15 years ago. We can't say that right now."

James Zarsadiaz, a historian at the University of San Francisco, has observed economic concerns largely driving the shift.

"There's a strong working class and lower middle class community of Asian Americans in Nevada, many of them working in hospitality, in the gaming industry," he said. "And so I think they're feeling the pinch more right at the grocery store, at the gas pump."

When it comes to Trump's economic policies, Rachel Puaina, a local teacher whose husband and four adult children are union workers, says she sees Trump standing up for the United States.

"Is this what you voted for? Yes, that's what we voted for," she said. "The tariffs. I've been wanting to do that for over 20 years."

She acknowledges that Trump's tariffs have led to volatility in the stock market, but she says Americans should be prepared to "suffer" for a little while and should give Trump's policies a chance to work.

"I looked at the stock market. Yep, it's plummeting," Puaina said. "And I was like, Well, this is what we get for allowing them to do this to us for how many years?"

Puaina, whose parents immigrated to the U.S. from the Philippines, also supports Trump's immigration policies, including his push to rethink birthright citizenship.

"As far as citizenship, I think we have to have more strict restrictions on it," she said.

Schayden Gorai, a field representative in Las Vegas for the conservative group Turning Point Action, identifies as Asian American and says he believes many in the local Asian community agree with Trump.

"A lot of them are immigrants from other countries, and they did it the right way. They went through the process themselves. And I think they just want to be treated fairly," he suggested. "There's a right way and a wrong way to do things. They've done it the right way, and they think that everybody should also do it the right way and be treated equally."

Zarsadiaz says for some Asian Americans with recent ties to immigration, those very experiences have drawn them to Trump's rhetoric.

"They don't see immigration as a racial issue. They see it as a fairness issue or a matter of law and order," he said.

But for some Asian Americans here, uncertainty caused by Trump's deportation policy is sparking fear.

At an Asian cultural festival in Las Vegas recently, a woman named May — a naturalized citizen who was born in the Philippines — says Trump's efforts to do away with birthright citizenship worry her.

"I'm like, will I be next … you know what I mean?" she asked.

May asked that her last name be withheld because she has a family member who's seeking citizenship and she's hesitant to speak publicly.

"I'm just worried … just because he's going through the right channels, he could be deported," May said. "It's just like a little bit of uneasiness."

Nevada represents a more pronounced example of a larger shift. In November, Asian American voters nationwide moved toward Trump by about six points compared to 2020.

That said, it's unclear whether Trump can maintain that support. In a poll released by the Public Religion Research Institute this week, just 4 in 10 Asian Americans said they approved of Trump's job performance so far.

October 2, 2025: Newsweek (Kate Plummer): Donald Trump’s Approval Rating Implodes With Asian Voters (archive)
U.S. President Donald Trump's approval rating has plummeted with Asian voters, a new poll shows.

According to polling by AtlasIntel, the Republican's net approval rating among this demographic has dropped by 63 percentage points in two months.

Newsweek contacted the White House by email to comment on this story.

Why It Matters​

Asian Americans are an important voting bloc who proved integral to Trump's success in the November 2024 presidential election. While 57 percent of Asian voters opted for Democratic candidate and former Vice President Kamala Harris in the last election, the proportion of Asians who voted for Trump increased from 30 percent in 2020 to 40 percent, showing a remarkable rightward shift.

Maintaining the support of this demographic will be important for Trump particularly when voters head to the midterms.

What To Know​

In their July poll of 1,935 adults, AtlasIntel found that 57 percent of Asian voters said they approved of Trump while 43 percent said they disapproved of him. This left him with a net approval rating of +14 percentage points.

At the time, Trump had announced tariffs on countries including Japan and South Korea but had also reached trade deals with Japan, Vietnam and Indonesia. The administration also announced an intention to double the number of Chinese students at U.S. universities.

By September, only 26 percent of Asian voters said they approved of the President while 75 percent said they disapproved—a net approval rating of -49 percentage points.

While the poll did not address why people's opinion of the president had soured, in September, as polling was being conducted, more than 300 South Korean workers were detained by U.S. authorities in Georgia, then returned home on 12 September, testing relations between the two countries.

The July poll, conducted between July 13 and July 18 had a margin of error of +/-2 percentage points. The September poll was conducted between September 12 and September 16 and had a margin of error of +/-3 percentage points.


Other communities have also turned away from Trump, polls have indicated. New polling by The Economist/YouGov says Trump's net approval rating among millennials plunged by 14 percentage points in the last month.

Overall, a recent Echelon Insights poll, conducted between September 18-22, showed that Trump's disapproval rating had jumped from 51 percent to 53 percent since last month, while his approval rating was down two points to 45 percent. Overall, his net approval dropped by four points. Last week, according to political analyst Nate Silver, Trump’s net approval also slightly declined.

What People Are Saying​

Thomas Whalen, an associate professor who teaches U.S. politics at Boston University, told Newsweek: "This development is about as surprising as the New York Jets losing another game, which is to say it isn’t. The administration’s harsh stance on immigration and comments like the president made last week at the U.N. on how Asia allegedly dumps its "garbage" on the U.S. and world have taken a toll. Asian voters are responding to reality. Trump and his MAGA supporters have hung out a 'America is for whites only' sign for everyone to see. Not for similar dismal polling numbers from other nonwhite minority groups. RIP inclusion.

What Happens Next​

Trump's popularity with all demographic groups will likely fluctuate as his presidency continues. It will be tested when voters participate in the midterm elections in November 2026.

October 14, 2025: AsAmNews (Randall Yip): Asian Americans slam Trump on immigration and economy (archive)
A new poll just released by AAPI Data/Associated Press and National Opinion Research Center shows that the majority of Asian Americans overwhelmingly disapprove of Trump’s handling of major issues.

The 1,027 people surveyed reveal Asian Americans dislike President Trump’s handling of immigration, trade, economy, crime and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

A similar survey by the same polling firms found more than half of the 1183 people asked from the general population also disagree with Trump on these issues, but not as much as Asian Americans do.

74% of Asian Americans disapprove of Trump’s handling of the economy versus 62% of the general population.

Similarly, its 71% vs 56% on immigration, 75% vs 63% on trade and 74% vs 59% on foreign policy, 63% vs 53% on crime and 75% vs 60% on the Israeli-Gaza conflict.

The poll was conducted during the first two weeks of September, weeks before the recent breakthrough in the peace talks and the exchange of prisoners for hostages.

Trump’s disapproval rating among Asian Americans has plummeted significantly since March, 71% in September compared to 58% six months ago.

Only 2 in 10 support the deployment of National Guard troops yet about half support the deportation of immigrants charged with misdemeanors. At the same time, only 35% support the deportation of all immigrants living in the U.S. illegally.

“Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders widely disapprove of the Trump administration’s handling of immigration, even more so than earlier in this year,” says Karthick Ramakrishnan, executive director of AAPI Data and a
researcher at UC Berkley. “Most AAPI adults believe that the administration has gone too far on immigration enforcement, and they oppose various tactics that immigration agents have used in large-scale enforcement
operations.”

This latest poll seems to reinforce numerous other polls released earlier this month.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
Bullshit. Almost no Asian-Americans are Japanese, and those are the only "based" Asians.

You get your occasional "roof Korean" or generationally commie-traumatized Hmong, but bobody is more anti-white than a professional-class second- or third-generation Chinese or Korean.

They fuckin' haaaaaaaaaate us. More than niggers do.
 
The article is from November 21, 2024. Here's some newer ones. Feel free to find more.
NPR? Nope.

Newsweek? Naw.

Even AsAmNews seems guilty of looking the other way with Black-on-Asian crime.
 
They didn't shift anywhere.

The Prog-Left threw them away because they weren't suffering enough from racism to be trendy as adopted pets.
 
The NPR article is basically 90% quoting Asians who support Trump/Republicans, with one who got scared by the immigration crackdown at the end.

Please find some news articles about this that you agree with, and are newer than November 2024.
 
>groids assault Asians in the street, push them under subway trains and steal their shit constantly as they’re ’soft targets’
>awareness grows and media begins reporting
>shitlib leftards try to blame it on ‘white supremacy’, and not pantywaist soft-on-black-crime policies from dipshit judges installed by Democrats

Asians by and large aren’t fucking stupid and many of them (Chinese, Taiwanese, Vietnamese, Laotians, Cambodians, Hmong, Koreans etc) are painfully familiar with Communism’s many brutal slaughters. No wonder they reject the idea that being killed by nigs is whitey’s fault, and will turn away from political parties not addressing the actual problem.


Imagine being an Asian kid who worked his ass off through high school to get a 4.0GPA and being rejected by multiple ivy leagues while lazy/weed-retarded blacks coast in.
Wyświetl załącznik 8119126

>C in chemistry
>"Got put out of Honors Program on a technicality"

I think you meant put in in the first place on a technicality nigger holy shit. The fact they can't even see it and actually use the blatant DEI nonsense to explain away being a lazy, retarded nigger is incredible...
 
Throwing south asians, south east asians, and east asians into the same group is lunacy.
For example I think the east asians went right because they can see where the violence against them are coming from and they're not dumb enough to buy 2021 to 2024 being a great time to be a businessman.
South asians went right because they just like being on the winning side and votes whatever way the CEOs of America lean
 
Wstecz
Top Na dole