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U.S. Census: Texas is Nation’s Newest ‘Majority-Minority’ State

U.S. Census: Texas is Nation’s Newest ‘Majority-Minority’ State

WASHINGTON

Texas has now joined Hawaii, New Mexico and California as a majority-minority state, along with the District of Columbia, the U.S. Census Bureau reported this week. Five states — Maryland, Mississippi, Georgia, New York and Arizona — are next in line with minority populations of about40 percent. (The minority population includes all people except non-Hispanic single-race Whites.)

According to July 1, 2004, population estimates, Texas had a minority population of 11.3 million, comprising 50.2 percent of its total population of 22.5 million. In comparison, 77 percent of Hawaii’s population was minority. In New Mexico and California, the proportions were 57 percent and 56 percent, respectively, while the District of Columbia was 70 percent minority.

The following race data are for people reporting their specified race, whether or not they reported any other races, and for Hispanics (who may be of any race). Among the highlights:

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