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Efren Curiel, 45, is sworn in as
a naturalized U.S. citizen in
March at the Quiet Cannon
Country Club in Montebello.
Californias 300,000 naturalized
citizens accounted for nearly
one-third of the nations total. |
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Naturalized Hispanics Poised to
Reshape California Politics
LOS ANGELES (By Teresa Watanabe,
LATimes) May 11, 2009 More than 1
million immigrants became U.S.
citizens last year, the largest
surge in history, hastening the
ethnic transformation of
California's political landscape
with more Hispanics now eligible to
vote.
Leading the wave, California's
300,000 new citizens accounted for
nearly one-third of the nation's
total and represented a
near-doubling over 2006, according
to a recent report by the U.S.
Office of Immigration Statistics.
Florida recorded the second-largest
group of new citizens, and Texas
claimed the fastest growth.
Mexicans, who have traditionally
registered low rates of
naturalization, represented the
largest group, with nearly
one-fourth of the total. They were
followed by Indians, Filipinos,
Chinese, Cubans and Vietnamese.
The new citizens are reshaping
California's electorate and are
likely to reorder the state's policy
priorities, some political analysts
predict. Several polls show
Hispanics are more supportive than
whites of public investments and
broad services, even if they require
higher taxes.
Most Hispanics, for instance,
support all five budget propositions
on the May ballot while most whites
oppose them, according to recent
polls by the nonpartisan Public
Policy Institute of California.
Although viewed as largely
conservative, most Hispanic
Americans supported a 2004 measure
requiring large businesses to
provide health insurance to
employees, even as it failed at the
ballot box.
Nationally, nonwhite voters
overwhelmingly supported Barack
Obama's presidential candidacy,
while most whites voted for Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.), a recent
study by the Pew Research Center
showed. And there were more nonwhite
voters last year Hispanic
registered voters increased by 3
million compared with 2004, said
Antonio Gonzalez, president of the
Southwest Voting Registration
Education Project in Los Angeles.
The surge in new citizens will
accelerate by several years the
California electorate's shift from
majority white to nonwhite,
according to Dowell Myers, a USC
demographer. Although that shift
won't be completed until 2026, Myers
and others said, Hispanics, Asians
and African Americans are already
joining with progressive whites to
elect ethnically diverse candidates.
"As we have more Hispanic voters,
our electorate will begin to look
more like the face of the public at
large," said Mark Baldassare of the
Public Policy Institute. "From the
standpoint of representative
democracy, few things could be more
important than this."
The path to the 1-million mark was
paved by an organized collaboration
among community activists, the
Spanish-language media and
government. Univision TV network and
La Opinion newspaper, in particular,
had many stories about the
importance of citizenship and
demystified the application process,
said Arturo Vargas, executive
director of the National Assn. of
Hispanic Elected and Appointed
Officials Educational Fund in Los
Angeles.
"You could not go throughout Los
Angeles and not be bombarded with
the message it's time to become a
citizen," said Vargas, whose
organization helped spearhead the
national campaign called Ya Es Hora
("It's Time").
U.S. immigration officials worked
weekends to distribute information,
develop TV scripts and provide an
official to conduct an on-air mock
citizenship interview, Vargas said.
Jane Arellano, district director of
the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration
Services' seven-county area covering
Southern California, was the
movement's "unsung hero," he said.
Arellano said she first met with
activists in 2006 about their
citizenship campaign plans. As she
watched citizenship applications
shoot up in January 2008, Arellano
immediately appealed to her agency's
headquarters for extra help.
In all, she managed to add more than
100 extra staff, won authorization
for weekend overtime work and worked
with the courts to add and expand
citizenship ceremonies. The high
point came in September, when 34,000
new citizens took the oath of
allegiance more than a fourfold
increase over the previous year,
Arellano said.
Meanwhile, the region's adult and
community colleges joined the
effort, expanding English and civics
classes to help prepare immigrants
for their citizenship test. The Los
Angeles Unified School District's
adult education division nearly
doubled the number of citizenship
classes last year over the previous
year, officials said.
One of those new Hispanic voters was
Joanuen Llamas, a 26-year-old Mexico
native and Los Angeles homemaker who
legally immigrated here in 1998. She
was inspired to become a citizen in
March 2008 after joining the massive
immigrant rights marches of recent
years and took to heart their
slogan, "Today we march, tomorrow we
vote."
"It made me think that's the way to
change anything in this country,"
said Llamas, who cast her first
vote, for Obama, in November.
Those demographic and political
trends will continue to marginalize
Republicans unless the party makes
major changes in its tone and
policies toward immigrants, said
Allan Hoffenblum, a Republican
political consultant in Los Angeles.
"The reason the Republican Party is
in such dire straits is its
inability to successfully reach out
and change its image among
Hispanics," he said. "The image is
too shrill on immigration. It's an
image of an intolerant cult."
But Gonzalez said Hispanics and
other immigrants still had far to
go, noting 8 million of them have
not yet claimed citizenship although
they are eligible. "The test is
going forward," he said.
Indeed, new citizenship applications
have already dropped significantly.
In the Southern California district,
for instance, applications plunged
to 58,433 last year from 253,666 the
previous year, U.S. immigration
statistics show.
Most experts say a 69% increase in
application fees to $675 was one
reason for the steep decline. The
Obama administration is proposing
$206 million in funding for
immigration services that could help
reduce the fee by about $50, and
activists are hoping for more, said
Rosalind Gold of the National Assn.
of Hispanic Elected and Appointed
Officials Educational Fund. New
citizen Alfonso Vergara is one
product of the massive citizenship
campaign effort. A Mexico native and
pharmaceutical technician, the
31-year-old said he had postponed
applying for citizenship for years
because the process seemed too
time-consuming.
But last year, he said, he was swept
up in the marches and the call for
civic activism.
"It was time for me to build a
stronger future for my family and
become a more active person in this
country," he said.
Ultimately, Vargas said, the
citizenship wave will help Hispanics
and other new U.S. citizens
contribute even more to the country.
"This isn't about helping Hispanics
for the sake of helping Hispanics,"
Vargas said. "This is about helping
Hispanics succeed for the sake of
America."