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Democrat Jerry Brown |
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Democrat Barbara Boxer |
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California Hispanic Voters Support
Democrat Candidates
A new Times/USC survey shows
Hispanics backing Democrat Jerry
Brown by 19 points over Republican
Meg Whitman in the governor's race,
and Barbara Boxer by 38 points over
Carly Fiorina for the U.S. Senate.
.
LOS ANGELES
(By
Cathleen Decker, Los Angeles Times)
September 27, 2010
— Hispanic voters, who have helped
to propel California's leftward
political swing over recent years,
remain reluctant to embrace
Republican candidates as the
November general election nears, a
new Los Angeles Times/USC poll has
shown.
Registered voters who identified
themselves as Hispanic backed
Democrat Jerry Brown by a 19-point
margin over Republican Meg Whitman
in the race for governor, despite
Whitman's multiple appeals to
Hispanic voters during the general
election campaign. Registered voters
who identified themselves as white
gave Brown a slim 2-point margin.
In the race for U.S. Senate,
incumbent Democrat Barbara Boxer
held a 38-point lead over Republican
Carly Fiorina among registered
Hispanic voters, five times the lead
she held among white voters.
Hispanic views are keenly watched by
political candidates and campaigns
because of the state's demographic
march. A 2009 study by the Field
Poll found white voters had declined
from 83% to 65% of the electorate in
the previous three decades. At the
same time, the percentage of
Hispanic voters had almost tripled,
to 21%.
To allow a more precise look at this
key voter group, the new poll,
sponsored by The Times and the USC
College of Letters, Arts, and
Sciences, supplemented its sample of
registered California voters by
interviewing 400 Hispanic registered
voters in either English or Spanish.
To avoid changing the overall
results, their numbers were adjusted
in the poll to match expected voter
turnout.
In both the races for governor and
for U.S. Senate, the candidate
standings for Hispanic voters deemed
likely to cast ballots in November
were similar to those seen among all
registered Hispanic voters, but the
margin of error for likely voters
was larger because of the smaller
sample size.
Hispanics were also propping up
President Obama's standing in the
state. Among white voters, 52%
approved how Obama was handling his
job; among Hispanic voters, 64%
approved.
Not even the most optimistic
Republican odds maker has presumed
that the GOP candidates could win
the Hispanic vote outright, but the
party has long sought to at least
boost its standing among Hispanics
enough to narrow the traditional
Democratic edge among other groups,
such as women and nonpartisan
voters. This year, Whitman has
fought Brown to a near-draw for much
of the campaign, but that has been
due to her gains among nonpartisan
voters and women, not Hispanics.
Whitman has reached for Hispanic
support in myriad ways. She began
airing ads on Spanish-language
television stations after her June
primary victory, highlighting her
opposition to Arizona's new
immigration law. She also noted her
opposition to the particulars of the
1994 California measure, Proposition
187, which would have denied
taxpayer-financed services to
illegal immigrants. She erected
billboards in Hispanic communities,
opened a campaign office in East Los
Angeles and spoke to
Spanish-language media outlets.
But she remains the favorite of only
one-third of registered Hispanic
voters, the survey found.
Vinka Valdivia of Escondido, a
Latina who is a registered
nonpartisan voter, said she favored
Brown because he knew the workings
of government and would watch out
"for the middle class."
"She is a corporate person who has
run very big corporations, but she,
for me, is not the right person to
care about the middle class,"
Valdivia said.
The survey indicated that
Republicans like Whitman and Fiorina
have an opening to rally Hispanic
voters because of the backgrounds
they bring to their races — Whitman
as the former head of EBay and
Fiorina as the former chief
executive of Hewlett-Packard.
When voters were asked whether they
preferred a governor with experience
in government or one who has
"real-life experience in business,"
white voters sided narrowly with the
government veteran. Hispanics,
however, gave a 12-point advantage
to the business world outsider. When
voters were asked whether they were
more concerned that Whitman would
side with big corporations or that
Brown would bow to labor unions,
white voters cited Whitman and
corporations by 8 points. Hispanics
were less worried, expressing the
same concern by a mere 3 points, and
they were no more concerned than
whites with the personal money
Whitman has spent on her campaign.
"There are certainly factors that
would have argued for Whitman to do
well," said Manuel Pastor, a
professor of American Studies and
Ethnicity at USC.
Whitman herself has long hoped that
her business background and the
growing small-business pursuits of
Hispanics would provide some common
ground. "Latinas are the
fastest-growing segment of the
market in starting new businesses,"
she told supporters at an Orange
County event in May 2009, explaining
why Hispanics were a key component
of her plan for victory.
But that affinity has yet to
translate into political gains.
Hispanic voters gave Brown the edge
in a range of comparisons —
including which candidate would
bring a clear plan, energy and
decisiveness to the governorship —
that white voters thought were best
represented by Whitman. Hispanics
gave Brown the edge over Whitman in
handling the economy, immigration,
developing jobs, taxes and
education. White voters gave Whitman
the edge in handling the economy and
taxes.
Overall, while white voters gave
Brown a net unfavorable rating, by a
47%-42% margin, Hispanic voters gave
Brown a favorable rating, 34% to
26%. Whites (48% to 36%) and
Hispanics (34% to 22%) both gave
Whitman a net unfavorable rating In
both the races for governor and
Senate, Hispanic voters were more
likely than whites to say they did
not yet know enough about the
candidates to form an opinion.
Because they constitute smaller
percentages of voters, the views of
African American and Asian voters
could not be compared in a
statistically meaningful way.
Democratic strategists have hoped
that Whitman's courtship with
Hispanics would be blunted by the
GOP primary, during which challenger
Steve Poizner engaged her in a
dispute over illegal immigration.
Trying to stave off abandonment by
conservatives, Whitman aired an
advertisement in which her campaign
chairman, Pete Wilson, said that she
would be "tough as nails" on illegal
immigrants. Wilson, the former
governor, is still derided by many
Hispanics for his support of
Proposition 187 in 1994.
The poll did not directly test the
effect of their immigration stances
on Whitman and Fiorina, but the
results on other questions suggested
the issue is significant. In both
races, Hispanics gave Democrats an
advantage in handling immigration by
at least 20 points, higher than for
all other issues except healthcare.
(On that issue, asked only of the
Senate candidates, Boxer held the
edge over Fiorina by 31 points among
Hispanics.)
"The Hispanic voters are being
motivated by multiple issues, but
immigration is certainly one,"
Pastor said, also citing healthcare
and the environment.
Neither Hispanics nor any other
voter group demonstrates unanimity.
Herman Gonzales , a Republican from
East Los Angeles, said he was
attracted to both Whitman and
Fiorina by their business
backgrounds. He considers Boxer "too
polarizing," and his negative view
of Brown dates to Brown's first
tenure as governor. He said he was
not turned off by Whitman's stance
on illegal immigration — or
Fiorina's even tougher one. Rather,
he feels they do not go far enough
in fighting what he called "the
single-most threat" to good-paying
California jobs.
"They might voice anti-this or
pro-that, but they are different
sides of the same coin," he said.
The Los Angeles Times/USC poll was
conducted Sept. 15-22. Results for
Hispanic registered voters have a
margin of error of 5 points in
either direction. The margin for
white votes is 3.3 points in either
direction. The survey was a joint
project of the Democratic polling
firm of Greenberg Quinlan Rosner and
the Republican firm American
Viewpoint. Additional Hispanic
interviews were conducted by
Hispanic Decisions.