Washington Post
By Mary Jordan
June 21, 2015
Laura
Aguilera is 19 and works seven days a week in this city in the baking
Nevada desert to earn money for nursing school. So, she explained after a
10-hour shift at
Los Lupes Mexican restaurant, “I haven’t had time to focus on who is
running for president yet.”
But
unprecedented efforts to get Aguilera’s attention are beginning all
around her because her vote, and those of the growing number of Latinos
who live in battleground
states like this one, is considered vital to winning the White House in
2016.
Jeb
Bush and Marco Rubio, the two Republican presidential candidates seen
as having the greatest chance to make inroads with the Latino vote that
traditionally leans Democratic,
recently stopped in Nevada, Bush showcasing his fluent Spanish and
Rubio highlighting that he is the son of Cuban immigrants. Hillary
Rodham Clinton addressed 1,200 Latino leaders gathered in Las Vegas last
week and said that she would do more than President
Obama — and certainly far more than any Republican rival — to stop
deportations and enact immigration reform.
Clinton’s
campaign is registering voters outside Hispanic grocery stores and
churches, while a conservative group backed by the billionaire Koch
brothers is compiling
valuable contact lists as it offers free services, such as driver’s
license prep classes, in Spanish. And, critically for a demographic that
skews young, campaigns are creating bilingual Web sites, videos and
messaging for Facebook and other digital platforms.
“I
have never seen the Latino vote prioritized in this way — and this
early — in a meaningful way,” said Cristóbal Alex, president of the
Democratic-backed Latino Victory
Project.
Because
Nevada hosts one of the first primaries and is a purple state — it went
for Obama for president in 2008 and 2012 but overwhelmingly reelected
Republican Brian
Sandoval for governor in 2014 — both parties are putting in early and
extra efforts here. Twenty-seven percent of Nevada’s population, and
about 16 percent of its eligible voters, are Hispanic, and each party
sees the vote of Aguilera and people like her as
both critical and gettable.
“I am way more interested in what the person says, not what party they are from,” Aguilera said.
The
U.S.-born daughter of Mexican immigrants, she is the face of a changing
state and nation. Her city of 18,262 people ringed by spectacular red
rock that rises out of
the desert was founded by a few Mormon families a century ago. Because
of nearby Nellis Air Force Base and “an old-fashioned, flag-waving
community feel,” many retired military veterans settled here, Mayor
Allan Litman said.
About
15 years ago, Mesquite got into the casino business, and thousands more
people, many of them of Mexican heritage, moved in and went to work in
the new hotels and
restaurants.
“The
makeup of the city has dramatically changed,” said Litman, 72, who
teaches a spin class at the rec center. Half of all school-age children
and as much as 30 percent
of the town is Hispanic.
Nationally,
800,000 Latinos turn 18 every year, making them eligible to vote. The
largest numbers of Latinos live in California and Texas. But the focus
on the Latino
vote for 2016 is sharpest in states both parties see as up for grabs:
Nevada, Florida, New Mexico, Colorado and a handful of others, such as
Virginia, where no party is dominant and Latinos, though not as
numerous, can play a significant role.
Obama won all of these states in 2012.
Just
look at the electoral college map, said Simon Rosenberg, president of
NDN, a center-left think tank. “There is no path for Republicans to win
the presidency in 2016
without flipping heavily Hispanic states” that went for Obama, he said,
which is why “unprecedented amounts of money will be spent speaking to
this community.”
Daniel
Garza, the executive director of LIBRE, the Koch-backed initiative
offering free services to Hispanics in many battleground states, said
Republicans cannot afford
to have the Democrats win 71 percent of the Hispanic vote, as Obama did
in 2012.
“We
intend to double down our efforts” in this “constituency at a
crossroads,” Garza said. Republicans “don’t need to win a majority, just
inch it up.”
More
Latinos are registered as Democrats, but Republicans say they see an
opening because so many are young and without hardened, partisan voting
habits and because many
hold some conservative social values, including opposition to abortion
rights.
So far, Clinton’s campaign is the most visible on the ground in Nevada, with staff already beginning to knock on doors.
Many
people interviewed said they had never heard of Marco Rubio. But the
senator from Florida is hoping his life story, as the son of a
hardworking hotel bartender from
Cuba who worked in Las Vegas for years, will resonate. He has signed on
Lt. Gov. Mark Hutchison to chair his campaign in Nevada.
And
there is speculation about whether Bush will ask Sandoval, the popular
governor, to be his running mate. Bush’s son, George P., was in Reno
last week, reminding people
that his mom is from Mexico. “Claro que sí” — “of course” — the younger
Bush said, when asked if his father would be speaking more Spanish, as
he did at his campaign kickoff in Miami.
The
most difficult issue for Republican candidates has been how to deal
with the 11 million undocumented immigrants, many of them Latino, in the
country. Latinos want
a path to citizenship for their relatives, but many in the GOP base —
those needed to win the primary — are dead-set against rewarding those
who entered the country illegally. There has been fierce Republican
opposition to Obama’s executive action on immigration,
which would provide legal status to many of the undocumented and remove
the threat of their deportation.
“It’s
a really important issue for me,” said Aguilera, who said a close
relative who has worked in the United States for nearly 20 years cannot
return to Mexico to see
her family. If she does, she can’t come back because she has no legal
papers.
“Not
a single Republican candidate, announced or potential, is clearly and
consistently supporting a path to citizenship. Not one,” Clinton said at
a Nevada stop this
month. “When they talk about ‘legal status,’ that is code for
second-class status.”
But
many Latinos interviewed said they were disappointed with Obama for not
fulfilling promises to do more and are fed up with all politicians.
Last November, they stayed
home, and exceedingly low Latino turnout has been widely seen as
helping Republicans in Nevada take control of the legislature for the
first time in nearly a century, win statewide offices, and knock off a
Democratic House member in what was considered a very
safe district.
“What happened in 2014 spooked the hell out of Democrats, and they realize they don’t own the Latino vote,” Garza said.
Alex,
from the Latino Victory Project, said the battle is on to engage
disaffected voters, and a major effort will be made to target “the
firsts” in families — the first
to speak English, the first to attend college, the “influentials” who
can sway other relatives to vote.
Democrats
are making a special effort to win over Latino women, including setting
up women-to-women phone banks that will tap grandmothers, moms and
daughters to support
Clinton.
Across
the board, more women than men vote for Democrats, and many observers
say women in Latino families can be especially influential.
“It’s
time for a woman in the White House,” said Rocio Ramirez, 42, who was
shopping at the Wal-Mart in Mesquite with her daughter. She said that
she voted for Obama and,
before that, for George W. Bush, but that the only interesting thing in
this race, at least so far, was that finally a woman might change
things up.
But
over at the La Mexicana Market, Roger Rojas said he voted for Obama but
now thinks he will vote Republican. “I just feel maybe a Republican
will get us back on track
again.” His father, who was working behind the meat counter, where a
huge statue of Our Lady of Guadalupe rested, got his permanent residency
because of Ronald Reagan, he said. While his father is still not a
citizen and therefore can’t vote, his U.S.-born
son will. “Reagan was the last president that did anything for us, and I
have been really disappointed in Obama.”
Amanda
Renteria, a Latina who serves as Clinton’s political director, said
Latinos will ultimately vote for Democrats because their policies more
closely align with Latino
interests, from immigration reform to an increased minimum wage to
affordable health care.
“When you look at the track record of Republicans over the course of history, they haven’t been with them,” she said.
Asked
about efforts to focus on women in the Latino community, Renteria said,
“We have all been influenced by the strong Latina, the woman who keeps
the family together.”
Since Clinton is a grandmother — an abuelita — it might be a good idea
to start “abuelitas for Hillary.”
Because
social media has vastly changed since 2012, Renteria said big efforts
are underway to connect with Latinos where they get their news — often
on their phones.
She
said that in the campaign’s conversations with Spanish-language media,
the reaction has been: “Wow. You haven’t been here so early. Thanks for
not showing up two weeks
before the election.”
Aguilera,
who works as a hostess at a Mexican restaurant on the weekends and at a
health clinic during the week, said she is waiting to hear candidates
tell her “where
our country is going to be in 20 years.” And, she said, “I want to hear
that they will fix immigration and make things more equal for
everybody.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment