yeni

yeni

(27) A Proud and Loyal Democrat

Yeni Wong has been a Democrat for a very long time. And she has also, as a loyal Democrat, not only worked on behalf of issues and causes that she believes in but supported a lot of Democrats over the years. “I am a proud Democrat, and I support Democrats up and down the ticket. Always have, always will,” she said.

Yeni has given me an exclusive interview on her views about why Asian Americans are such loyal Democrats. She posits two possibilities: racial prejudice and identification with other minorities. Here are excerpts of the interview, edited for length and clarity.

Why are Asian Americans such loyal Democrats?

The first reason is that despite their affluence, Asian Americans are on course to become a mainstay of what Stan Greenberg, the Democratic pollster, calls the “rising American electorate”: the liberal alliance of black and Hispanic minorities, single women, and young voters. Asian Americans make up about 6 percent of the US population and about 3 percent of the 2012 vote. Those relatively small numbers mask considerable and continuing growth.

More remarkable is the huge shift in Asian American voting patterns in recent years. No other group measured by exit polls has changed its political allegiance more dramatically.

Asians are slated to outnumber Latinos as the largest immigrant group coming to the United States, according to a study by the Pew Research Center released last year. Specifically, Asian immigrants and their children are projected to make up roughly 88 percent of the country’s population growth over the next half century. That means being able to capture the Asian American vote is as important as ever. In the last few presidential elections, Asian Americans leaned heavily Democrat.

Why have Asian Americans shifted so strongly to the Democrats—more than doubling support for the party’s presidential candidates since 1992?

First, there’s race. The feeling of social exclusion stemming from their ethnic background might push Asian Americans away from the Republican Party. Many studies, such as Henri Tajfel and John Turner’s work on the psychology of intergroup relations, have shown that one’s identification with a broad category of people—be it on the basis of language, ethnic, or racial solidarity or some other trait—is important politically. Republican rhetoric implies that the nonwhite “takers” are plundering the white “makers,” which has cultivated a perception that the Republican Party is less welcoming of minorities. That might help explain why Asian Americans, despite their “maker” status, prefer the Democratic Party—even if the GOP doesn’t discriminate against Asians specifically. And many Asian Americans do feel as if they don’t get equal treatment.

According to the 2008 National Asian American Survey, nearly 40 percent of Asian Americans suffered one of the following forms of racial discrimination in their lifetime:
·      being unfairly denied a job or fired,
·      being unfairly denied a promotion at work,
·      being unfairly treated by the police,
·      being unfairly prevented from renting or buying a home,
·      being treated unfairly at a restaurant or other place of service, or
·      being a victim of a hate crime.
We found that self-reported racial discrimination was positively correlated with identification with the Democratic Party over the Republican Party.

How have Asian American voters gone from Republican to Democratic?

Asian Americans tend to support a strong social safety net and a stronger role for government in everyday life. Asian Americans are more likely than the US public in general to support Obamacare and to support environmental protection over economic growth. In the case of immigration, support among Asian Americans for a path to citizenship for the undocumented has grown steadily, so as the Republicans’ rhetoric on immigration has become more punitive, the community has actually moved in the opposite direction.

Asian Americans are the best-educated, highest-income, fastest-growing race group in the country. The political liberalism of Americans of Asian descent is notable given their affluence, success in the marketplace, and the high status of jobs they hold. In the Asian American workforce, 60 percent have a college degree, compared with 37 percent of whites, 27 percent of African Americans, and 18 percent of Hispanics. Fifty percent of Asian Americans have managerial or professional jobs, compared with 39 percent of whites, 29 percent of African Americans, and 20 percent of Hispanics.

Asian Americans also stand apart from other Americans of all races and ethnicities in family structure. On the divisive issue of abortion, Asian Americans are more liberal than the general electorate. Asian Americans believe abortions should be legal in most or all cases, compared with an eight-point spread in the general public. In this respect, Asian Americans are similar to another minority voting group with strong Democratic ties: American Jews. They, too, have incomes and educations well above average. Jewish support for Democrats is similar to that of Asian Americans.

Asian Americans share with blacks, Hispanics, and Jews an experience of previously marginalized status and social exclusion. These four constituencies also share a belief that a commitment to hard work and self-reliance does not conflict with a belief in a strong government and a reliable safety net. Such views stand in direct contrast to those of the Tea Party and Wall Street wings of the Republican Party, both of which see self-reliance and big government as antithetical to each other. It may prove that the values that Asian Americans, Jews, blacks, and Hispanics share will create sufficient cohesion to sustain a liberal coalition, even as some members of the coalition fail to ascend the socioeconomic ladder in lockstep with the others. That is the current conundrum of the upstairs-downstairs American left.

Why do Asian Americans tend to vote Democratic?

In my experience, Asian Americans tend to be fairly economically and socially conservative. So they do lean more toward the values of classical liberalism on economic and political policy while also placing equal emphasis on traditional values, as American conservatives do. However, today’s Republican Party is actually much, much more conservative/reactionary than most of the First World. So while many Taiwanese people agree with Republicans on economic issue, and gender inequality is even greater in Taiwan and Japan’s strongly masculine societies, they don’t agree with Republicans on these issues. When Republicans compare Obamacare to communism or fascism, that’s not going to trend very well with most Asian Americans who’ve lived outside of the United States.

When Republicans talk about how government interference with health care is a road to disaster, Hong Kong and Singaporean Americans are going to be rightly skeptical, as Bloomberg ranks their socialized, universal health-care systems respectively first and second in efficiency. It’s also hard to convince Indian Americans or Chinese Americans that environment and industry regulators such as the EPA and FDA are a bad thing, as they likely know first- or secondhand what a difference such regulations make in quality of life and public safety. Also, when Republicans argue that any nondefense spending is government pork, it probably won’t resonate with Japanese Americans who’ve seen the benefits of Japanese government investment in hybrid-vehicle technology, robotics, and Internet infrastructure.

In fact, most Asian countries seem to believe firmly in technology and education investments, while the Republicans seem fixated on budget cuts and ending renewable energy investments. So while Asian Americans might have had more in common with Republicans of the past, current Tea Party Republican appeals to flag-waving and fear mongering are more likely to turn Asian Americans off. Similarly, issues like banning abortion and stopping immigration don’t have much resonance with most Asian Americans. We also don’t see the “war on religion” as many leading Republican politicians/commentators describe it.

Why don’t Asian Americans vote Republican?

When we examine presidential exit polls, we see that 74 percent of the Asian American vote went to the Republican presidential candidate just two decades ago. The Democratic presidential vote among Asian Americans has steadily increased from 36 percent in 1992, to 64 percent in the 2008 election, to 73 percent in 2012. Asian Americans were also one of the rare groups that were more favorable to President Obama in the latter election. This dramatic change in party preference is stunning. No other group has shifted so dramatically in its party identification within such a short time period. Some are calling it the “GOP’s Asian erosion.” Moreover, Asian Americans as a group have a number of attributes that would usually predict an affinity for the Republican Party. Asian Americans’ income is, on average, higher than any other ethnic group in the United States.

So why are Asian Americans leaning left instead of right?

The feeling of social exclusion stemming from their ethnic background might be pushing Asian Americans away from the Republican Party. Since the Democratic Party is seen as less exclusionary, we find that triggering feelings of social exclusion makes Asian Americans favor Democrats.

How is this politically consequential?

It is important to note that our findings do not mean that social exclusion is the only reason why Asian Americans are Democrats. However, they do provide some insight on why Asian Americans are leaning left today. Understanding Asian American political behavior has important electoral ramifications. According to a 2013 US Census report, while Asian Americans are only 5 percent of the US population and about 4 percent of voters, in some states, they make up a considerably higher proportion of the electorate. Asian Americans make up 12 percent of likely voters in California and they had become 9 percent of the overall US population in 2015.

How do you see the rise of Asian Americans?

Asian Americans trace their roots to any of dozens of countries in the Far East, Southeast Asia, and the Indian subcontinent. Each country-of-origin subgroup has its own unique history, culture, language, religious beliefs, economic and demographic traits, social and political values, and pathways into America. But despite often sizable subgroup differences, Asian Americans are distinctive as a whole, especially when compared with all US adults.

As mentioned above, Asian Americans exceed other groups in the share with a college degree but also in median annual household income and median household wealth. Asian Americans have a pervasive belief in the rewards of hard work. In fact, Asian Americans sometimes go overboard in stressing hard work. Their living arrangements align with these values. The latest immigration wave from Asia has occurred at a time when the countries with the most emigrants have experienced dramatic gains in their standards of living, but few Asian immigrants are looking over their shoulders with regret.


For the most part, today’s Asian Americans do not feel the sting of racial discrimination or the burden of culturally imposed “otherness” that was so much a part of the experience of their predecessors who came in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. On a personal level, Asian Americans are more satisfied than the general public with their financial situations and their standard of living. About four in ten Asian Americans say Asian Americans are more successful than other racial and ethnic minorities in the United States.