CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2012, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 2012, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SLEEPING GIANT
STIRS AS LATINO VOTERS WIN FOR OBAMA”
Weeks before Tuesday's
election, President Obama began to realize his only chance for victory: Awaken
the so-called sleeping giant of American politics, the approximately 50.5
million Latinos or Spanish-speaking U.S. residents, 26 million of whom are
eligible to vote.
“If I win,” he said in late October,
“it will be because of Latinos.”
Obama and his private pollsters, then,
may have had a clue that something was happening among Hispanic voters, those
whose ethnic roots lie in Mexico, Central and South America, as well as Spain
and Portugal.
Something important was indeed
occurring. So now there’s the possibility the same effect which turned
California from a generally Republican state to a reliably Democratic one in
presidential politics may spread elsewhere. This state changed from mostly red,
in television parlance, to almost exclusively blue after the anti-illegal
immigrant 1994 Proposition 187 passed handily, threatening millions with loss
of public schooling, emergency room care and other services.
Within three years of its passage,
more than 2.5 million Latinos became naturalized citizens and registered to
vote in California, almost all of them solidly Democratic then and now.
What happened Tuesday was an extension both of that and the 2010
“Harry Reid effect,” in which all supposedly reliable polls showed Reid, the
Senate majority leader, losing his reelection bid to arch-conservative
Republican Sharron Angle, a Tea Party-backed candidate.
But those surveys, measuring the
sentiments of what they called “likely voters,” badly underestimated the number
of Latinos who would turn out. Reid, who went into Election Day trailing by
five points in the polls, won by about six points.
This year, the last pre-election
versions of polls put Republican Mitt Romney ahead by one percent to two
percent in the national popular vote. But when the final popular vote is in,
Obama will lead in that count by at least 1 percent, besides winning big in the
Electoral College.
The key for him was among Latinos.
“When you look at polls in any state
that’s competitive with a big component of the electorate being Latino, you
tend to see that they tend to underestimate the Latino vote,” University of
Nevada political science Prof. David Damore told a reporter.
Added Matt Barrero of the University
of Washington and the Latino Decisions polling outfit, “Pollsters missed a
component of the correct proportion of Spanish interviews. They underestimated
a growing part of the electorate, and this is the part that is most heavily
Democratic.”
Barrero’s outfit predicted that
Latinos nationally would vote for Obama over Romney by about a 3-1 margin. It
was greater than that in swing states like Nevada and Colorado, not to mention
California.
Obama won in 2008 by getting record
numbers of minority and youth voters to turn out. He won about 80 percent of
non-white votes that year, while losing the white vote to John McCain by 6
percent. This year, Obama won not much more than 35 percent of white votes, but
even more minorities turned out than four years ago. In an increasingly diverse
country, where Latinos are the No. 2 ethnic group behind only Caucasians, that
was enough. The Latino vote was about 25 percent larger than in 2008.
“We knew Latinos would vote in record
numbers,” said Eliseo Medina, national head of the Service Employees
International Union, whose membership is heavily Hispanic. “There is no longer
any doubt we are a political force to be reckoned with.”
And because virtually all Latino
citizens whose families have been in this country for two generations or less
have some blood tie to at least one illegal immigrant, the treatment of
illegals became the central issue for them. While Romney was calling for
“self-deportation” and campaigning with Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach,
the chief author of Arizona’s SB 1070, the racial profiling law detested by
almost all Latinos, Obama granted administrative relief to as many as 4 million
youthful illegals.
That helped make up for the letdown
his Latino supporters suffered when he failed to produce a pathway to
citizenship for the undocumented.
But Latinos voted not just on
immigration. “We certainly don’t need any more profiling laws like AB 1070,”
said Medina. “But we also didn’t need repeal of a healthcare law that will
cover 9 million more Latinos and we don’t need a tax system that rewards the 1
percent. As much as some candidates manipulate their rhetoric, we can read
between the lines.”
That all spelled another four-year
term for Obama and guarantees both parties will pay even more attention to
Latino issues than they have. It also means polling firms like Gallup and
Rasmussen, whose readings were mistaken, need to go back to the drawing board.
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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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