WASHINGTON President Barack Obama is remaking the Democratic Party, forging a new political coalition that is steadily replacing the old party alignment first built by Franklin D. Roosevelt in the 1930s.
His re-election was made possible by the same voters who approved gay marriage in three states, access to in-state tuition for young illegal immigrants in one state and elected a record number of women at least 97 to Congress.
In 2012, communities of color, young people and women are not merely interest groups, theyre the new normal demographic of the American electorate, said Janet Murguia, president of the National Council of La Raza, the largest national Latino civil rights and advocacy organization in the United States.
In his acceptance speech early Wednesday, Obama referenced the nations changing population.
It doesnt matter whether youre black or white, or Hispanic or Asian, or Native American, or young or old, or rich or poor, disabled, disabled, gay or straight you can make it here in America if youre willing to try, he told thousands in Chicago.
Hours later, standing outside Obamas house in Chicago, TyRon Turner, a black supporter who traveled from Inglewood, Calif., to attend Obamas victory party, couldnt stop thinking about the divisions in the country evident on TV on election night as cameras panned to the saddened, mostly white faces at Romneys party to the jubilant, racially diverse audience at the presidents.
We were all hugging each other, black and white, Turner said. I said to someone, Look at all the different races in this room. We were all together as Americans, as we should be. This is what America looks like.
Supporters and opponents alike had questioned the staying power of Obamas coalition in the years after he won his first election. But on Wednesday, even Republicans began to acknowledge that they needed to make their own changes.
Republican commentator Dick Morris wrote Wednesday that he had mistakenly believed Romney would win in part because he thought the 2008 surge in black, Latino and young voter turnout would recede in 2012.
These high levels of minority and young voter participation are here to stay, he wrote. And, with them, a permanent reshaping of our nations politics.
Independent political analyst Charlie Cook said Obama won on the cold number, the demographics of who voted, and that Republicans must look beyond white males to win again. Thats just not where this country is going to be five, 10, 15, 20 years from now, he said. This country is changing and theyve got to change.
The nations rapidly changing demographics were on Obamas side. Population increases in key battleground states were largely among Democratic constituencies, including blacks, Asians and Latinos.
An estimated 10 percent of the electorate was Latino, up from 9 percent in 2008. And Obama won 71 percent of the Latino vote, according to exit polls, up from 67 percent four years ago.
He received 60 percent of the vote from people ages 18-29. The Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement CIRCLE a youth research organization at Tufts University, said that early estimates show that 22 million to 23 million young Americans or at least 49 percent voted. CIRCLE director Peter Levine said turnout for young voters has increased over the last three elections averaging what he called a new normal of about 50 percent and making the once not-so-reliable voting segment now an essential political bloc.
The gay vote is not yet measured in exit polls. But a poll conducted by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research said that 5 percent of voters self-identified as gay, lesbian and bisexual and more than three-quarters of them cast their ballots for Obama.
Obamas support remained strong among a number of key constituencies, including black voters, nine out of 10 of whom backed Obama, and women, who broke 55-44 for Obama.




