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Census Data Shows Where US White Population Is in Decline

Census Data Shows Where US White Population Is in Decline

Newsweek6 hours ago

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
New data released by the United States Census Bureau Thursday showed that the country's Asian population grew the fastest in the past year, while the white population became the racial group to decline.
The latest population estimates, through July 2024, showed a shift in demographics across the U.S., with a 4.4 percent growth in the Asian population compared to a 0.1 percent decline among the white population.
"The major implication is the major change that is taking place in the U.S. population with respect to its race and ethnic structure," Rogelio Saenz, a professor in the department of sociology and demography at the University of Texas in San Antonio, told Newsweek.
"The Census Bureau has projected that in 2044 the nation would be majority minority, or more non-white than white in the in the population, and I think that that these patterns are well afoot. We're getting closer to that reality."
Why It Matters
The Census Bureau data also highlights an aging population overall, along with fewer children and young people, at a time when there are concerns around a shrinking U.S.-born workforce and mass deportations of illegal immigrants, as well as broader concerns across much of the West about declining birthrates.
What To Know
The yearly population estimates, which are taken on July 1 of each year, showed a shifting demographics balance across the country. While the white population maintains the largest share overall, it was also the singular declining racial group — a trend that has been identified for several years. The 2020 Census was the first time in U.S. history that the white-alone population declined, going from 223.6 million in 2010 to 204.3 million a decade later.
The nine states that saw drops in their white populations were Alaska, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oregon, Pennsylvania, West Virginia and Vermont.
The Hispanic or Latino population remains the second-largest racial group in the U.S., totaling 68 million in mid-2024, having grown by nearly 3 percent. Saenz said that could decline in the coming year.
"That's been the major worry I think in terms of the mass deportations," Saenz said. "The impact that that's going to have on already a nation that is aging and particularly with the white population and the workforce itself, aging as well, who's going to do those jobs?"
Research in October by the non-partisan National Foundation for American Policy found the majority of the domestic labor market's growth came from immigrants over the past five years, while many states had continued to see their immigrant populations grow, including Texas, Florida, California and New York.
Other data points highlighted by the Census Bureau included the U.S.' aging population, with the 65-plus group growing from 12.4 percent of the national population 20 years ago to 18 percent last year. The share of children, defined as those under 18, dropped from 25 percent to 21.5 percent across the same period.
The number of states where older adults outnumbered children rose from three in 2020 – Florida, Maine, and Vermont – to 11 in 2024, with Delaware, Hawaii, Montana, New Hampshire, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and West Virginia joining them.
What People Are Saying
Lauren Bowers, chief of the Census Bureau's Population Estimates Branch, in a press release: "Children still outnumber older adults in the United States, despite a decline in births this decade. However, the gap is narrowing as baby boomers continue to age into their retirement years. In fact, the number of states and counties where older adults outnumber children is on the rise, especially in sparsely populated areas."
What's Next
The U.S. Census Bureau publishes data on a regular basis, with the next update due in December.

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JD Vance Bald Baby Face Meme Shown in Irish Parliament
JD Vance Bald Baby Face Meme Shown in Irish Parliament

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JD Vance Bald Baby Face Meme Shown in Irish Parliament

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Irish lawmaker Ivana Bacik held up a meme depicting Vice President JD Vance, in her country's parliament on Tuesday following reports a 21-year-old Norwegian tourist was refused access to the U.S. because he had the image on his phone. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has denied this allegation ,saying the tourist was refused entry "for his admitted drug use." Newsweek contacted Vance for comment on Thursday via email outside of regular office hours. Lawmaker Ivana Bacik speaking in the Dáil Éireann, the lower chamber of the Irish parliament, on Tuesday (left) and the meme of Vice-President Vance which a Norwegian student said border control viewed on his phone... Lawmaker Ivana Bacik speaking in the Dáil Éireann, the lower chamber of the Irish parliament, on Tuesday (left) and the meme of Vice-President Vance which a Norwegian student said border control viewed on his phone before he was refused entry to the U.S. (right). More Dáil Éireann/X Why It Matters Since the Trump administration assumed office in January it has sought to clamp down on illegal immigration whilst also revoking the visas of some international students who have taken part in pro-Palestinian demonstrations. There have since been a number of reports of tourists from other developed economies being detained or refused entry into the U.S. and several European countries have updated their travel advice raising fears for the U.S. tourism industry. 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"That a young person with this amusing meme on their phone depicting a public person, that this would be used as an excuse to detain him for five hours and then deport him back to Oslo." Bacik then asked "what can you do to reassure young people here who hope to travel to the U.S. on a J1 visa?" J1 visas allow entry to the U.S. for education or cultural exchanges. O'Callaghan said "I can't control the U.S. immigration system" but added the Irish government would raise the issue with American authorities. Changes to J1 student visa application rules implemented by the Trump administration mean applicants must disclose all social media accounts they have used over the past five years so they can be viewed by U.S. authorities before any visa is granted. 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It felt like I was a terrorist suspect where I was sitting. I tried to pull myself together several times, but in the end, I just wanted to get home again." What Happens Next The requirement that U.S. authorities can view prospective J1 visa applicant's social media accounts is likely to cause further controversy, with critics arguing it's a form on censorship whilst supporters say it protects America from foreign political agitators.

Democrats need to show blue collar workers some respect
Democrats need to show blue collar workers some respect

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Democrats need to show blue collar workers some respect

Aretha Franklin made clear what she needed (as did Otis Redding, who actually wrote the song). 'All I'm askin',' she famously sang, 'is for a little respect!' She then spelled it out, in case you weren't sure: 'R-E-S-P-E-C-T.' Put in political terms, you can't get votes from people you don't respect. Or more accurately, you can't get votes from people who believe you don't respect them. When people of faith, or gun owners, or those worried about illegal immigration hear Democrats say that such people 'get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations,' they don't feel respected. More succinctly, assigning people to a 'basket of deplorables' does not signal respect. Neither does speaking as if to the Harvard faculty club or failing to put forward candidates who represent a particular segment of the population. Which is the most underrepresented group in Congress? Blacks? Gays? Women? Latinos? No. The most underrepresented segment in Congress are those without a college degree. According to the Census Bureau about 67 percent of Americans do not hold a college degree, whereas in Congress that number is less than 2 percent — a gap of more than 65 percentage points. Non-college degree holders are not the same as blue-collar workers, although they often overlap and many conflate the two. Blue collar workers do not feel respected. A 2024 Pew poll found that a mere 10 percent of blue-collar workers feel they are respected by their fellow Americans. And those blue-collar workers aren't wrong. A group of European scholars found better educated Americans hold more negative attitudes towards less well-educated people than toward highly educated people. Less-educated people ranked at the bottom of a list of disfavored groups. They were also seen as more responsible and blameworthy for their situation than others. Who is least likely to disrespect them? Not their co-workers or supervisors, but rather their clients and customers — the rest of society. The wages they are paid constitute one kind of evidence of disrespect. That particular dissatisfaction is signaled most painfully by the fact that 'pay has not kept up with increases in the cost of living.' Indeed, the whole idea of meritocracy which, until Trump, animated both parties' rhetoric for decades, reinforces this educationalism. Suggesting America is a meritocracy implies that people get what they deserve. Both success and failure are in the hands of each individual. Elon Musk 'deserves' to be the richest man in the world because of his intellect, ability and vision, or so meritocrats would claim. The corollary of course is that those who are struggling economically also deserve what they got. The implication is 'it's their fault.' As political philosopher Michael Sandel put it, the 'single-minded focus on education as the answer to inequality is partly to blame. Building a politics around the idea that a college degree is a condition of dignified work and social esteem has a corrosive effect on democratic life. It devalues the contributions of those without a diploma, fuels prejudice against less-educated members of society, effectively excludes most working people from representative government and provokes political backlash.' Trump tells non-college voters a very different and much more congenial story. They've gotten a lot less than they deserve, because immigrants, foreigners, incompetent politicians and other elites have conspired to bar the door to their success. Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro lead the way in a different direction for Democrats. On his first day in office, the newly elected governor removed the requirement for a college degree affecting some 65,000 state jobs. 'In Pennsylvania,' he said, 'the people should decide what path is best for them, not have it decided by some arbitrary requirement or any arbitrary limitation.' He insisted that hiring should instead focus on skills and experience. It's just one important example of showing respect to blue collar voters, whom Democrats need to return to the fold. Mellman is president of The Mellman Group a consultancy that has helped elect 30 U.S. senators, 12 governors and dozens of House members. Mellman served as pollster to Senate Democratic leaders for over 30 years and is a member of the American Association of Political Consultants' Hall of Fame. He holds degrees from Princeton and Yale.

China to Hegseth: US on Path to 'Fire and Suffering'
China to Hegseth: US on Path to 'Fire and Suffering'

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China to Hegseth: US on Path to 'Fire and Suffering'

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. A senior Chinese defense official on Thursday accused the U.S. of betraying Beijing's trust by continuing to sell arms to self-ruled Taiwan. The remarks at the Chinese Defense Ministry's month-end press conference were a direct response to recent testimony given by U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who had described China as America's "pacing threat." Why It Matters China claims democratically governed Taiwan as its own, although the Chinese Communist Party has never ruled there. Taipei is a key U.S. security partner in the center of the so-called first island chain in the Western Pacific. The U.S. is Taiwan's biggest arms supplier, allowing the island push back against Beijing's sovereignty claims for decades. However, Taipei may soon find itself overwhelmed by China's growing hard power across the Taiwan Strait. At a Pentagon budget hearing earlier in June, Hegseth told the Senate Appropriations Committee that recent Chinese military exercises around Taiwan point to Beijing's preparations to attack before the end of the decade. What To Know "The U.S. side has repeatedly broken its promises and insisted on arming Taiwan. This will only lead to its own fire and suffering," Chinese defense spokesperson Zhang Xiaogang told reporters in Beijing. Washington sells defensive weapons to Taiwan under the auspices of the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979. China doesn't recognize the legitimacy of the U.S. domestic law and sought in February to warn President Donald Trump against further weapons transfers. Zhang did not elaborate on what he meant by "broken its promises" but appeared to be referring to a 1982 U.S.-China joint communique, in which Beijing said Washington had committed to gradually reducing arms sales to Taipei. U.S. officials later clarified that the pledge was based on the condition that China also dial down its threats to take Taiwan by force. "We urge the U.S. side to establish an objective and rational view of China, stop using China as a talking point to deceive and mislead the American people and the international community, and instead create favorable conditions for the development of relations between the two countries and the two militaries," Zhang said. The U.S. State Department did not immediately return a written request for comment. A stock image shows the Chinese destroyer Jinan 105 moored at a jetty on June 25, 2025, in the Chinese port of Qingdao. A stock image shows the Chinese destroyer Jinan 105 moored at a jetty on June 25, 2025, in the Chinese port of Qingdao. Johannes Neudecker/picture-alliance/dpa/AP Earlier, Hegseth told U.S. lawmakers that China was undergoing "an unprecedented military buildup" that could threaten American military supremacy globally. President Donald Trump has ordered a revival of the U.S. defense industrial base to stay ahead in fields such a "emerging technologies and new weapons," he said. It was the second time in a month that Beijing had lashed out against the U.S. defense chief over his remarks. After a prickly speech by Hegseth at Asia's top security forum in Singapore at the end of May, China's Defense Ministry accused the Pentagon leader of "deeply ingrained hegemonic logic and Cold War mentality." China's Foreign Ministry said: "Hegseth deliberately ignored the call for peace and development by countries in the region, and instead touted the Cold War mentality for bloc confrontation, vilified China with defamatory allegations, and falsely called China a 'threat.' The remarks were filled with provocations and intended to sow discord. China deplores and firmly opposes them and has protested strongly to the U.S." What People Are Saying Pete Hegseth, U.S. secretary of defense, in a statement to the Senate Appropriations Committee on June 11: "When an opponent sees our well-equipped and tough-as-nails warriors, they will decide that today is not the day to test American resolve…The Indo-Pacific is our priority theater and China is our pacing threat. That's why I've traveled to the Indo-Pacific twice already to visit our forces and meet with our allies and partners." Zhang Xiaogang, spokesperson for China's Ministry of Defense: "Major countries should not treat relations like a zero-sum game. Peaceful coexistence is the bottom line that China and the United States should jointly uphold. China's development poses no threat to any country. China has never engaged in things like deterrence and coercion as some countries do. The Chinese military has always been a firm force for maintaining world peace." What Happens Next A U.S.-China confrontation over the future of Taiwan could potentially escalate into a nuclear conflict. Pentagon officials say the Trump administration's goal is to prevent an attack on the island by Beijing in the coming years. A recent poll by the Ronald Reagan Institute found 70 percent of Americans, including 70 percent of Republicans and 75 percent of Democrats, would support U.S. military action to defend Taiwan if China attempted an invasion or blockade.

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