Final answer:
In the United States, voter turnout is more skewed toward wealthy, older, educated Whites compared to European turnout. White people historically vote at higher rates than voters of Asian or Latina/Latino descent. Black turnout has historically been higher than other minority groups. Research on Latinx turnout has shown that it is complex and influenced by several factors.
Step-by-step explanation:
Compared with European turnout, American turnout is more skewed toward wealthy, older, educated Whites. In the United States, White people have historically voted at substantially higher rates than voters of Asian or Latina/Latino descent, with the gap ranging from 15 to 20 percentage points.
Asian American turnout has never reached the 50 percent mark. Black turnout has historically been higher than that of other minority groups. Research on Latina/Latino (Latinx) turnout has shown that the group is not a monolith and that several different factors contribute to any understanding of Latinx voter participation.