The Power of the Hispanic Voter
WASHINGTON
(NYT)
November 23, 2010
—
Democrats were hurt in the midterm
election by low turnouts or
faltering support from voters who
were young, black or female. But
overwhelming support from Hispanic
voters appears to have helped elect
Democratic senators in Nevada,
California, Colorado and possibly
Washington State. Hispanic voters
may have kept the Senate in
Democratic hands.
Hispanics voted at a rate of 2 to 1
for Democrats, according to several
polls, and many were stirred to
action by viciously anti-immigrant
ads or comments made by Republican
candidates.
Eligible Hispanic voters represent
about 9 percent of the national
electorate, a slight increase over
previous years, but the percentages
are much higher in the West,
climbing to 22 percent in
California. They are less
predictably partisan than other
ethnic groups and the two major
parties have long contested for
their votes. Early polls had
suggested many were disappointed in
both parties for failing to act on
immigration reform, and it appeared
they might sit out the midterms.
Then came a series of ads by
Republican candidates like Sharron
Angle, who was running for the
United States Senate in Nevada. One
of hers depicted Hispanics sneaking
over the border, carrying weapons
and appearing in police mug shots.
Tom Tancredo, whose anti-immigrant
sentiment was already known, ran for
governor of Colorado by telling
workers their jobs were threatened
by undocumented immigration.
Meg Whitman, the Republican
candidate for governor of
California, pandered to the same
sentiment by saying her former
housekeeper, an undocumented
immigrant, should have been
deported.
Now Hispanic political activists had
galvanizing issues. Groups like Mi
Familia Vota, La Raza and Lulac
spent the last weeks of the campaign
organizing voters against these
diatribes.
A tracking poll conducted by Latino
Decisions, a polling organization,
found the number of very
enthusiastic Hispanic voters shot up
to 58 percent on Oct. 25 from 40
percent a month earlier.
As the Hispanic electorate continues
to grow faster than the overall
population in the years ahead, the
2010 election should be a useful
lesson.
Anti-immigrant demagoguery
occasionally works, as it did in a
number of Republican victories in
Arizona this year. But more often it
will produce an angry reaction among
a growing group of committed voters.