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Over 11.5 lakh Indian-Americans eligible to vote in US

March 12, 2012 14:30 IST

Indian-Americans, whose voters' population has doubled in the last decade, have emerged as a powerful group in the United States that the ruling Democrats and opposition Republicans cannot ignore in the presidential election year.

According to 2010 census, more than 11.54 lakh Indian Americans are eligible to vote as against 5.76 lakh in 2000, said a report released by two American NGOs -- South Asian

Americans Leading Together and Asian American Federation.

Between 2000 and 2010, the South Asian-American population became the fastest growing major ethnic group in the US and emerged in new areas of the country, the report said.

Overall the South Asians of voting age increased between 100 per cent to 414 per cent, it said as President Barack Obama makes his re-election bid in November.

Indians comprise the largest segment of the South Asian community, making up over 80 per cent of the total population, followed by Pakistanis, Bangladeshis, Sri Lankans, Nepalis, and Bhutanese.

It is estimated that at least 66,000 Indo-Caribbeans live in the US. The population of Indian-American (single ethnicity) has increased by 69 per cent from 16.78 lakh in 2000 to 28.43 lakh in 2010.

During the same period, the population of Indian-Americans (single and multiple ethnicities) increased from 18.99 lakh to 31.83 lakh.

According to the report, the population of eligible Pakistani-American voters increased from 52,755 to 1.61 lakh (an increase of 205 per cent).

"With the 2012 elections underway, there has been an increase in the number of South Asians of voting age in the United States since 2000," according to the report by SAALT and AAF, which said it was based on the figures of 2010 population.

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