Hispanics Outnumber Whites in Texas, New Census Numbers Show
Chris Menahan
Hispanics officially outnumber whites in Texas, according to the latest updated census numbers.
Latinos officially make up the largest share of Texas’ population. 🎉
Texas had a white majority since 1850. Latinos have been powering the state’s population gains for the last 20 years, surpassing white folks on July 2022.
Latinos can shape the future!https://t.co/3EuqzxM9la
— Voto Latino (@votolatino) June 22, 2023
Upon hearing the news, Texas Democrats immediately shifted from championing minority rights to demanding majority rights.
The point at which Latinos would outnumber white residents to make up the biggest share of the Texas population has been on the state’s demographic horizon for years.
It seemed that long-awaited milestone was reached in 2021 when a closely watched data release last year was the first to reflect the culmination of decades of transformative growth.
But confirmation did not come until this week, when the U.S. Census Bureau updated its official population estimates. In new figures released Thursday, the bureau confirmed Latinos have made up the largest share of the state’s population since at least July 2022. The new population figures show Hispanic Texans made up 40.2% of the state’s population last summer, barely edging out non-Hispanic white Texans, who made up 39.8%.
The updated estimates retroactively captured a landmark moment in Texas’ demographic evolution, but it’s not much of a turning point. The new figures showing Latinos outnumbering white Texans by about 129,000 cap off a population boom that has been culturally recasting the state for several decades.
The state had a white majority from at least 1850 until 2004, when white people’s share of the state population dropped below 50%. People of color, Latinos in particular, have been powering the state’s population gains for at least the last 20 years.
The state’s growth — usually close to evenly split between natural increase and net migration, including both domestic and international — has brought diversity to pockets of the state that were once nearly all white, transforming classrooms and workforces. Hispanic Texans are expected to make up a flat-out majority of the state’s population in the decades to come, and most Texas children will soon be Hispanic. Recent census estimates showed that 49.3% of Texans under the age of 18 are Hispanic. It’s been more than a decade since Hispanic students first came to make up a majority of Texas public school students.
Rather than allow the white minority to get affirmative action and be given access to various minority business loans and grants, the Texas Tribune cited various “experts” insisting whites must instead be made to give up more of their money and political power to advance “equity.”
The newly reached demographic milestone underscores the urgency with which the state must buy into its future, said Sharon Navarro, a political science professor at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
“I think it speaks to the importance of state and local government to invest in their institutions and organizations that will train and equip Latinos with the skills that they need to obtain high-demand jobs, living wages, access to food, housing and other essentials that will allow them to participate in a robust economy and would also allow them to accumulate and pass on their wealth,” Navarro said.
[…] “I remember as I was growing up hearing it’s going to be decades before we were the majority or before we were the largest group,” said state Rep. Victoria Neave Criado, a Dallas Democrat who chairs the Mexican American Legislative Caucus. “I think for me as a Latina legislator in a city and region that is thriving with Latino-owned businesses, it makes me proud. I think it also highlights the needs for changes in our policy.”
Criado said whites need to realize they’re not the state’s “destiny.”
“When you have individuals who have not walked in our shoes refusing to acknowledge that racism exists, that there have been historical barriers in our state, to me it’s a very coordinated attempt to hold onto their power for as long as possible and refusing to acknowledge that we are the state’s destiny,” Neave Criado said.
When the 2020 census data was first released, the Washington Post’s Jennifer Rubin similarly reacted with glee to news that white were rapidly becoming a minority throughout the United States.
In just the span of a few months, Rubin transitioned seamlessly from insisting the Great Replacement was a “myth” to praising it as a demographic fact worthy of celebration.
“A more diverse, more inclusive society,” Rubin commented. “This is fabulous news.”
“Now we need to prevent minority White rule,” Rubin said.