Friday, September 27

Survey places Latino voters in the center of the political map

El poder del voto latino. (Aurelia Ventura/La Opinión)
The power of the Latino vote. (Aurelia Ventura/Real America News)

Photo: Aurelia Ventura / Aurelia Ventura/Impremedia/Real America News

By: Gabriel Lerner Updated 04 Mar 2022, 5 : 44 am EST

While the United States convulses between the Covid/19, extremism and the specter of a war in Europe, below the surface and far from the spotlight, is operating a change in the political identity of the Latino community.

Consequently, and for the first time in years, the Republicans hope that the Hispanic voter will prefer them in the next elections.

This is especially true now that Donald Trump – a notorious anti-Latino – is no longer in the White House.

What is at stake then is that the idea that Latinos will be identified with the Democratic vote in all circumstances is a myth.

Thus, in the Republican primary elections in the southern border counties of Texas this week there was an avalanche of eight Latino candidates (six of them women ) who won their races and who will run for Congress in November.

This derived from strong voter turnout in those counties.

The survey, commissioned by the Pat Brown Institute for Public Affairs at Cal State Los Angeles and the California Community Foundation, was conducted by Matt Barreto, President of BSP Research, and conducted among residents of Los Angeles County between November 8 and 34 from December.

Their conclusions are that the Latino population is attentive to what is happening around them and maintains a position on the events of the day. This makes them prone to be politically and socially interested in the community. They do not trust the government very much, but a large majority believes that it is important for a Latino to represent them in political life. For 46% that is “very important” and a 36%, “something important”.

This, of course, is good news for Latino candidates like, in the Los Angeles mayoral campaign, Kevin de León.

The signs that Latinos could begin to detach themselves from the Democratic Party do not mean that they have realized the American dream, that they are prosperous, and that like other communities, they change their point of view of society. No.

In fact, many Latinos are in a precarious situation, made worse during the pandemic, and half of them have a reserve of less than 85 dollars within their reach, as stated in the survey.

What’s more: nearly half of the county’s Latino population (which in turn make up the 48.6% of the million inhabitants) have lost their jobs or sources of income or working hours during the two years of the pandemic.

The Nor does the shift towards the partisan center necessarily bring manifestations of extremism. Nothing better to demonstrate this than weighing the vaccination rate among Latinos in the county: the 85%, against the 48% by Republicans according to a recent Gallup poll, and the 79% of the entire population.

We must conclude that the Hispanic citizenship of our area is positioned at the center of political thought; in the very definition of moderation and the coexistence of liberal and even radical positions with conservative and even misogynistic ones.

Because although the 80% of respondents know that anti-Latino racism is a significant problem, and that half of the total have experienced this racism, this does not include a rejection of the police or the Sheriff’s department: there are more who want to increase police budgets (34%) than those who want to reduce it (24%).

So the changes are partly subtle, partly overt. But to ignore them, especially in an election year, would be to make a serious mistake.

Because Latinos make up a third of registered voters – that is, of those most likely to vote – in the city and the Los Angeles county.

Does this mean that the Latino population and electorate are maturing and defining their interests? Or is it a step backwards and the Hispanic community gives in? It remains to be seen.

But it does mean that Democrats must win the Latino vote with facts on the ground. More than before.

The data is not definitive. They can fluctuate. We do not know what the situation will be in November.

But, once again, these are numbers that must be read carefully and cannot be ignored.

Gabriel Lerner is the editor emeritus of Real America News and editor of LatinoLosAngeles.com.