Are Democrats facing a Latino political exodus?

The Latino vote once considered a lock in the Democratic coalition and crucial to the party’s prospects in 2016 and beyond is showing signs of…

U.S. Sen. Mark Udall (D-CO) addresses guests at a Democratic Party election night event with his family at his side on election night. U.S. Rep. Cory Gardner (R-CO) upset Udall incumbency by winning the November 4th election.  (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)

The Latino vote once considered a lock in the Democratic coalition and crucial to the party’s prospects in 2016 and beyond is showing signs of possibly slipping away. Are more Latinos voting Republican?

While it may be premature to call it an exodus to the Republican Party, Hispanic voters helped the GOP gain ground in some decisive races in which the mid-term elections hinted at a shift in Latino voting patterns.

SEE ALSO: Immigration advocates to Democrats: Don’t say we didn’t warn you

Overall, Latinos voted for Democrats by a two-to-one margin, according to exit polling and other election returns, but in surprising states the Democratic Party’s reliance on past Hispanic voting trends proved to be a bust.

In Texas, Republican governor-elect Gregg Abbott carried 44 percent of the Latino vote, equalling the mark set by George W. Bush in his campaigns there, which made for an even greater 20 percent rout of Wendy Davis – plus carrying some traditionally Democratic counties in heavily Hispanic South Texas.

The news for Democrats in the Lone Star Stats gets worse when you consider that Republican Senator John Cornyn captured an astounding 48 percent of the Latino vote, winning re-election over Democrat David Alameel, who got 47 percent of the Hispanic electorate, according to exit polls.

Greg Abbott celebrates his victory as elected governor of Texas.

Texas Attorney General and Republican gubernatorial candidate Greg Abbott celebrates with Texas singer Pat Green during his victory party on November 4, 2014 in Austin, Texas. Abbott defeated Democratic challenger Texas State Sen. Wendy Davis. (Photo by Erich Schlegel/Getty Images)

Texas turns more Republican

Then there is this to weigh:

Texas is now redder than it was before the election, and this on the heels of a Battleground Texas campaign that boasted 34,000 volunteers and 7.5 million voter contacts to help Democratic darling Davis’ campaign and supposedly lay the foundation for winning the state’s 38 electoral votes for the Democratic presidential nominee in 2016.

It got redder because in the 23rd Congressional District, a largely Latino district between San Antonio and El Paso, Republican challenger Will Hurd unseated Democratic incumbent Pete Gallego, relying on heavy support from Hispanic voters in the Alamo City area.

Rubbing salt on a sensitive political wound, Hurd becomes the first black Republican from Texas elected to the House of Representatives since Reconstruction and joins the largest delegation ever of Texas Republicans in Congress.

“I believe this election was a lost opportunity for Democrats,” National Council of La Raza President Janet Murguia said in what may have been the understatement of the election.

Republicans carrying more of the Latino vote

In Colorado, where President Barack Obama’s success in 2008 and 2012 suggested blue state strength, Republican Cory Gardner unseated Democratic incumbent Mark Udall – heir of a longtime Democratic family dynasty there — in a stunning Senate upset helped by carrying 23 percent of the growing Latino vote that he aggressively pursued.

In the heart of increasingly Hispanic Dixie, Latinos in Georgia are already 4 percent of the electorate and they raised eyebrows as both the Republican gubernatorial incumbent and Senate candidate took nearly half of the Latino vote — 47 percent for Gov. Nathan Deal and 42 percent for Senate winner David Perdue.

In the American heartland, Kansas, Latinos also cast ballots Republican in unexpected fashion — voting 47 percent to help re-elect Republican Gov. Sam Brownback.

In Nevada, Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval not only won re-election but also did it by getting 47 percent of the Latino vote, a dramatic increase from the 15 percent that he received when he was first elected.

Brian Sandoval

Nevada Republican Gov. Brian Sandoval picked up only 15 percent of the Latino vote when he was first elected governor in 2010. This year, he won re-election with 47 percent of the Latino vote. (Photo by Isaac Brekken/MCT/MCT via Getty Images)

In Florida, it appears that the combination of a poor Latino turnout and lower Hispanic margins for Democrats caused the defeat of some Democratic candidates, including former governor Charlie Crist, losing to GOP incumbent Rick Scott who received 45 percent of the Latino vote.

Has there been an unforeseen shift in Latino voting trends or was this just a reaction to frustration with President Obama’s broken promises on immigration reform, the most recent his decision to delay executive action on the issue before the election as a way of protecting fellow Democats?

As it was, all his party’s Senate incumbents in historically red states that he was trying to protect lost anyway.

Illinois Congressman Luis Gutierrez may have put it best when he asked rhetorically during a news conference in Chicago the day after the election:

“You repress the vote in the Latino community and what did you come up with?”

It may even be that the Latino vote, whether through opposition or by boycotting the polls, even helped decide the fate of the Senate in the final two years of the Obama presidency.

Lack of action on immigration reform

Republicans captured narrow control of the Senate, and some Latino groups such as Presente Action had urged a boycott of four Democratic Senate candidates who supported a procedural vote that the organization considered to be strongly unfavorable to undocumented immigrants.

Among those four senators was Kay Hagan, the North Carolina incumbent who suffered a surprising defeat in her re-election race.

Immigration activists were quick to dance on Hagan’s political grave.

“Tonight you lost your job, but you will still go back to your family,” activist Lizbeth Mateo wrote on a Facebook post. “However, because of the inaction and ineptitude of your party many parents will not get that chance. Many will not go back to their kids tonight. If you ask me, you got what you deserve.”

A second senator targeted by Presente Action, Mark Pryor of Arkansas, was soundly beaten by Republican Tom Cotton. A third, Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, faces a tough runoff Dec. 6. Only Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire squeezed through to win re-election Tuesday.

What does this augur for 2016, especially in battleground states like Texas where the blueprint for turning it purple is now in shambles?

Petra Falcon, executive director of the advocacy group Promise Arizona that supports comprehensive immigration reform, offered up advice that might be a start for both parties.

SEE ALSO: Will immigration reform doom a 2016 Democratic ticket

“In presidential election years we know that is when there is going to be a battleground all across the country,” says Falcon, whose state’s Latino population has tripled since 1990. “And I think both political parties and candidates need to (understand) this growing Latino… population is the largest growing electorate in the country.

“And they need to embrace the issues that are important to us.”

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