The Job Is Open for National
Hispanic Leader
SANTA FE, NM
()
November 15, 2010
—
The Pew Hispanic Center, a project
of the Pew Research Center, has
released a new report on national
Hispanic leaders.
The findings indicate, by their own
reckoning, Hispanics living in the
United States do not have a national
leader.
When asked in an open-ended question
to name the person they consider
“the most important Hispanic leader
in the country today,” nearly
two-thirds (64%) of Hispanic
respondents said they did not know.
An additional 10% said “no one.”
These findings emerge from the 2010
National Survey of Hispanics, a
bilingual national survey of 1,375
Hispanic adults conducted prior to
this month’s mid-term elections by
the Pew Hispanic Center, a project
of the Pew Research Center.
The most frequently named individual
was Sonia Sotomayor, appointed last
year to the U.S. Supreme Court. Some
7% of respondents said she is the
most important Hispanic leader in
the country. U.S. Rep. Luis
Gutierrez (D-Ill.) of Chicago is
next at 5%. Los Angeles Mayor
Antonio Villaraigosa draws 3%, and
Jorge Ramos, an anchor on Noticiero
Univision, the national evening news
program on the Spanish-language
television network Univision, drew
2%.
No one else was named by more than
1% of respondents in the 2010
National Survey of Hispanics
conducted August 17 through
September 19, 2010, by landline and
cellular telephone. The margin of
error for the full sample is plus or
minus 3.3 percentage points at the
95% confidence level.
In the November 2, 2010 elections,
three Hispanics, all of them
Republican, were elected to top
statewide offices: Marco Rubio won a
U.S. Senate seat in Florida, Brian
Sandoval was elected governor of
Nevada, and Susana Martinez was
elected governor of New Mexico.
The prominence of these offices
conceivably could provide platforms
from which any of the three could
emerge as national Hispanic leaders,
but to do so they would have to
overcome some strong partisan head
winds. Nationwide, Hispanics
supported Democratic candidates for
the U.S. House this month by a wide
margin, according to the National
Election Pool’s national exit poll —
continuing a pattern of strong
Hispanic support for Democrats that
has persisted in recent elections.
At 47 million strong, Hispanics are
the nation’s largest minority group,
constituting more than 15% of the
U.S. population. As a group, they
feel increasingly targeted by ethnic
bias. More than six-in-ten (61%) say
discrimination against Hispanics is
“a major problem” that prevents
members of their ethnic group from
succeeding in America, up from 47%
who felt this way in 2002.
At various times in American
history, groups that have felt
aggrieved have rallied behind
leaders who championed their cause —
be it a Susan B. Anthony, who led
the women’s suffrage movement in the
late 19th century, or a Rev. Martin
Luther King, Jr., who led the civil
rights movement in the mid 20th
century. From the 1960s through the
1980s, Cesar Chavez, co-founder of
the United Farm Workers of America (UFW),
played a similar role for Hispanics,
who at the time were a much smaller
share of the U.S. population than
they are now.
But there are often times when
groups — be they ethnic, racial or
political — do not have easily
identifiable leaders. For example,
in a national survey conducted after
this month’s mid-term elections,
when Americans were asked who they
think of as the leader of the
Republican Party these days, more
than half (51%) said they don’t know
and 14% said that “nobody” leads the
party.
Today, not only are most Hispanics
unable to name anyone they consider
a national leader, but many see
divisions within the Hispanic
community between the native-born
and foreign-born. About half (45%)
say they believe immigrant Hispanics
and native-born Hispanics are
working together to achieve common
political goals, but a nearly
identical share (46%) say they do
not believe these two groups are
working together. Both the native
born, who comprise 47% of the adult
population of Hispanics, and the
foreign born, who comprise 53%, are
also roughly equally divided on this
question.
Prominent Hispanics & Leadership
The survey explored the subject of
leadership in the Hispanic community
in two different ways. The first was
to present an open-ended question in
which respondents were asked: “In
your opinion, who is the most
important Hispanic leader in the
country today?” As reported above,
nearly two-thirds said they did not
know, and an additional one-in-ten
said “no one.”
Later in the survey, respondents
were presented with the names of
eight prominent Hispanics and asked
if they had heard of each. Those who
said they had were then asked if
they considered that person to be a
leader. The sample was split in half
so that each respondent was asked
about four prominent individuals.
Of the eight names presented, just
two were familiar to a majority of
respondents: Sotomayor (67%) and
Ramos (59%). Four others were known
by more than a quarter of
respondents: Villaraigosa (44%),
Gutierrez (38%), New Mexico Governor
Bill Richardson (35%), and UFW
co-founder DoloresHuerta (28%). The
other two were familiar to only a
small share of respondents: U.S.
Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ) of Tucson,
Arizona (13%), and Janet Murguía,
President and Chief Executive
Officer of the National Council of
La Raza (8%).
In the follow-up question, anywhere
between one-third and two-thirds of
respondents who had heard of each
prominent Hispanic said they
considered that person to be a
leader. The highest leadership
“score” was received by Sotomayor.
Among the 67% who said they had
heard of her, some 68% said they
consider her to be a leader —
meaning, when the questions are
posed in this manner, a total of 45%
of survey respondents (67% × 68%)
consider her a leader.
Ramos is next with a leadership
score of 38%, followed by
Villaraigosa at 29% and Gutierrez at
23%. No one else on the list had a
score above 20%.
Leadership, Nativity and Language
For the most part, immigrant
Hispanics are more familiar than
native-born Hispanics are with the
names of persons presented in the
survey. For example, nearly threein-four
(73%) of the foreign born said they
have heard of Sotomayor, while just
59% of the native born said the
same. And more than half, 55%, of
the foreign born have heard of
Villaraigosa, while just
three-in-ten, 31%, of the native
born said the same. Only in the case
of Richardson are the foreign born
and the native born equally likely
to have heard of him — 35% and 36%
respectively.
Immigrant Hispanics are also more
inclined than native-born Hispanics
to say each of the eight prominent
Hispanics are leaders. Sotomayor
achieved a leadership score of 51%
among foreign-born Hispanics, but
only 38% among the native born.
Ramos achieved a score of 51% among
the foreign born — equal to that of
Sotomayor — but he achieved a score
of less than half that (23%) among
native-born Hispanics.
Responses to these questions are
also correlated with the preferred
language of the respondent.
English-dominant Hispanics are less
likely than bilingual or
Spanish-dominant Hispanics to have
heard of each prominent Hispanic,
except for Richardson and Murguía.
In the case of Richardson,
four-in-ten (40%) English-dominant
Hispanics have heard of him, but
fewer than three-in-ten (29%)
Spanish-dominant Hispanics said the
same. In the case of Murguía, all
three groups were equally likely to
say they have heard of her. Overall,
Ramos (78%) is the most well known
prominent Hispanic among the Spanish
dominant.
Among English-dominant Hispanics,
Sotomayor achieved the highest
leadership score (32%), followed by
Richardson (15%), Villaraigosa (13%)
and Gutierrez (10%). Among bilingual
Hispanics, Sotomayor once again has
the highest leadership score (45%).
She is followed by Ramos (39%),
Villaraigosa (26%) and Huerta (19%).
Among Spanish-dominant Hispanics,
Ramos achieved the highest
leadership score at 55%, followed by
Sotomayor (53%), Villaraigosa (41%),
Gutierrez (35%) and Huerta (21%).