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Please note!
This fact brief was originally published as an experiment to test the concepts behind fact briefs.
Readers should be aware that while there is still a lot of useful information in fact briefs like this one, not all of them reflect Gigafact's current methods and standards for fact briefs. If you come across any that you feel are out of date, don't hesitate to contact us at support@gigafact.org.

Have minority voters typically faced longer lines at polling places in recent elections?

Saturday, October 31, 2020
By Jacqueline Agustin
YES

Long lines to vote remain more common in urban precincts with larger minority populations, according to MIT-led surveys of recent national elections. In 2016's general election white voters waited 10 minutes on average to vote, Latino voters waited 13 minutes and Black voters waited 16 minutes.

In the 2018 midterms, as a precinct's percentage of nonwhite voters increased, so did wait times—from 5 minutes in districts that were 90% white or more, to 32 minutes in districts that were 90% nonwhite or more. The MIT survey, conducted in 2018 with the Bipartisan Policy Center, found "especially dramatic" increases in wait times in some states.

Anecdotal reporting of long waits in 2020 primaries suggests challenges remain, a Texas historian writes. "So far in 2020, voters have seen major delays, especially in majority Black neighborhoods."

This fact brief is responsive to conversations such as this one.
ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTOR
Between 2020 and 2022, under close editorial supervision, Gigafact contracted a group of freelance writers and editors to test the concepts for fact briefs and provide inputs to our software development process. We call this effort Gigafact Foundry. Over the course of these two years, Gigafact Foundry writers published over 1500 fact briefs in response to claims they found online. Their important work forms the basis of Gigafact formats and editorial guidelines, and is available to the public on Gigafact.org. Readers should be aware that while there is still a lot of relevant information to be found, not all fact briefs produced by Gigafact Foundry reflect Gigafact's current methods and standards for fact briefs. If you come across any that you feel are out of date and need to be looked at with fresh eyes, don't hesitate to contact us at support@gigafact.org.
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