5 May 2026: When a Majority Feels Itself Becoming a Minority
In the United States, for the first time since the Declaration of Independence, white Americans are projected to lose their majority status. I use the term non-Hispanic White Americans because that is the label the U.S. Census Bureau uses.
The Bureau projects that non-Hispanic White alone Americans will fall from 58.9% of the population in 2022 to 44.9% by 2060 under its middle scenario. Under a low-immigration scenario, the projected figure is 46.6%. Under a zero-immigration scenario, the group remains above half, at 50.7%.
That is the political fact inside the demographic fact. Immigration does not only change the labor market or the border. It changes the story a country tells about who owns the center.
As the United States moves toward a future where non-Hispanic whites are no longer a majority, I think about what that loss will do. Will perceived white status loss increase anti-democratic attitudes and support for political violence? Does it help explain Trump’s harsh immigration policies in 2026?
I think it does.
And I think it will.