CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2012, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 2012, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“LATINOS
STILL A NATIONAL SLEEPING GIANT”
Before the 1994 Proposition 187
galvanized them into a powerful voting bloc, it was common to refer to
California Latinos as a political “sleeping giant.”
No longer. Where before 1994,
Hispanics accounted for barely 10 percent of all California registered voters,
today that figure is about 20 percent and climbing. Those new Latino voters are
almost solely responsible for gradually converting this state from the
Republican bastion that supported every GOP presidential candidate save one
from 1952 through 1988 to a battleground state and then into a place Democrats
take for granted.
But the same political awakening has
not occurred nationally, even though it could. Because it has not, Republican
presidential candidate Mitt Romney virtually wrote off the national Hispanic
vote (except Cuban-Americans in Florida) when he chose Wisconsin Congressman
Paul Ryan as his running mate.
Ryan voted against the so-called DREAM
Act to allow legal status for many illegal immigrant students brought here as
young children by their parents and for illegals who have served in the
military. He backed a 2005 proposal to criminalize undocumented immigrants. For
just two items that turn off Latinos. Several Spanish-language news programs
also have focused on his complaints about “anchor babies.”
So Romney won’t get much Latino
support either in California or elsewhere. Less than 30 percent in several
early October polls. But there’s no evidence that either President Obama or
other Democrats are taking full advantage of the chance this gives them to
create nationally the same kind of Latino voting bloc that transformed
California.
For on a national
level, Hispanics remain a sleeping giant, not voting in nearly the percentages
of other, far smaller ethnic groups like blacks and Jews.
A study last summer
by the Washington, D.C.-based Center for American Progress (http://www.americanprogress.org/issues/2012/07/latino_voters.html),
found that the number of unregistered but eligible potential Latino voters is
sufficient to transform 10 “red” states that usually go Republican into swing
states.
In Arizona, for
example, 405,300 Latino U.S. citizens are not registered to vote. Another
573,300 Hispanic permanent residents there could become naturalized citizens
and register to vote. They might have gotten the impetus to do that last year,
when Arizona passed its controversial “stop-and-search” law, parts of which
have been thrown out by a variety of courts.
That’s what
happened in California when Proposition 187 passed by a large margin and
threatened to expel illegal immigrant children from public schools and prevent
the undocumented from using hospital emergency rooms.
But rather than
fight back by registering to vote, many legal Hispanic residents of Arizona
simply left, fleeing to other states or back to their home countries.
If the large
population of legal but unregistered voters there took the approach of their
California counterparts, they could change a state that favorite son Republican
Sen. John McCain carried by only 195,404 votes four years ago.
The same kind of
change is possible, too, in Florida, where more than 600,000 U.S. citizen
Latinos are not registered, and even in Texas, which went Republican in 2008 by
a margin of 950,000 votes. Currently such a solid GOP state that few
presidential candidates bother to campaign there, Texas has 920,000
unregistered Latinos eligible to vote right now and another 3 million Hispanics
who are probably eligible for citizenship, followed by voting rights.
There could also be
major changes in political equations if places like Georgia (where 218,000
legal immigrants are eligible to be naturalized), a state that went Republican
by just over 200,000 votes in 2008, and Nevada and Virginia, both swing states
that could become strongly Democratic if the combined 425,000 Latinos eligible
for citizenship there acted in significant numbers.
But Democrats are
doing little to accelerate this change. For one thing, Latinos are miffed that
President Obama’s administration has been aggressive about deporting illegals,
with raids on businesses continuing at the same time Obama tries to court
Latino voters, many of whom object to deportations, especially when they split
families.
Still,change will
eventually come because the numbers are there. All that’s needed is motivation
of the sort Proposition 187 provided. Despite the fact there has been no
citizenship drive in Arizona on the scale that changed California in the
mid-1990s, sufficient numbers of Latinos have registered to vote that neither
party now takes Arizona for granted.
“If just a portion
of the potential voters who exist would come out and vote, they could swing
elections,” said Philip Wolgin, an analyst at the Center for American Progress.
And if that
happened, it would be yet another example of California setting national
trends.
-30-
Email Thomas
Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most
Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It" is
now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net
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