Clinton and the Hispanic Firewall
Distrust Of Blacks Among Hispanic Voters
Could Trouble Obama
WASHINGTON
(By John B. Judis, New Republic)
December 20, 2007 — Hillary Clinton was
once thought to have had the Democratic
nomination sewn up, but if current polls
are any indication, she could
conceivably lose not only the Iowa
caucus, but also the primaries in New
Hampshire and South Carolina. Since
these states became the major test of
presidential aspirations, no Democrat or
Republican has ever gotten the
nomination after losing all three. But
even if she fails to win any of those
three critical early states, Hillary
Clinton still has a chance. That's
because of her strength among Hispanic
voters.
Hispanics will play a negligible role in
Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina,
but they will be a major factor in the
Nevada caucus on January 20 and in the
primaries in New Mexico, Arizona,
California, Colorado, New Jersey, and
New York on February 5. Those states
together account for 1,025 delegates;
only 141 are at stake in Iowa, New
Hampshire, and South Carolina. And if
the contest is at that point between
Clinton and Senator Barack Obama, then
Clinton's edge over Obama among
Hispanics, as seen in opinion polls,
could prove decisive.
In a poll from the Pew Hispanic Center
released earlier this month, Clinton led
among Hispanic Democrats with 59
percent, compared to 15 percent for
Obama and 4 percent for John Edwards. In
polls taken last week in California,
Florida, Illinois, New York, and Texas
by ImpreMedia, the largest Hispanic news
company in the United States, Clinton
led Obama by an astounding average of 55
to six percent among Hispanic Democrats.
Edwards got only 1.8 percent. Of course,
even with this kind of support from
Hispanics, Clinton could still lose
those primaries, but it certainly gives
her an edge.
There are some mundane explanations for
Clinton's margin over Obama and Edwards,
including Bill Clinton's popularity
among Hispanics and Obama's relative
lack of name recognition. Clinton has
also actively courted Hispanic voters.
In May, she won the endorsement of Los
Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
Afterwards, Mark Penn and Clinton's
Hispanic liaison Sergio Bendixen boasted
in a memo that "Clinton campaign's focus
and strategy to win the Hispanic vote
continues to grow stronger." And on
December 12, the campaign launched a
series of radio and television ads
airing across the country in Spanish and
English designed to appeal to Hispanic
voters.
But there may be another factor in
Clinton's success among Hispanics,
particularly with regard to Obama. And
it may have less to do with enthusiasm
for her candidacy than with a lack of
enthusiasm for the Illinois senator.
Over the last two decades, there has
been evidence of growing hostility from
Hispanics toward African Americans. Some
of this hostility is the result of
conflicts, or perceived conflicts, over
politically controlled resources in
cities and states. But as Tanya K.
Hernandez, a professor of law at George
Washington, has argued recently, it may
also be a legacy of an older Latin
American prejudice against blacks that
has been transplanted to this country.
While this conflict passes largely
unnoticed in the popular press, African
American and Hispanic sociologists have
been conducting extensive surveys in
Houston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York,
and Philadelphia. These surveys have
generally found that Hispanics display
more prejudice toward African Americans
than African Americans do toward
Hispanics or than whites display toward
African Americans. In the words of
University of Houston sociologist Tatcho
Mindiola, Jr. and two associates, "in
general African Americans have more
positive views of Hispanics than vice
versa."
In Mindiola's surveys of racial
attitudes in Houston, they asked
Hispanic respondents to describe blacks.
Some of the terms that most often came
to mind were "noisy," "loud," "lazy,"
"dropouts/uneducated," "hostile,"
"complainers/whiners," "bad people,"
"prejudiced," "aggressive," "angry,"
"disrespectful/rude," and "violent."
Only 54 percent of U.S.-born Hispanics
and 46 percent of immigrant Hispanics
approved of their children dating an
African American. Forty-one percent of
U.S.-born Hispanics thought blacks had
"too much power." Half thought that
"most government programs that are
designated for minorities favor African
Americans."
Duke University's Paula McClain, working
with nine other sociologists, found
similar attitudes among Hispanics living
in Durham, North Carolina. According to
McClain et al., "Hispanic immigrants
hold negative stereotypical views of
blacks and feel that they have more in
common with whites than with blacks."
For instance, 58.9 percent of Hispanic
immigrants, but only 9.3 percent of
whites, reported feeling that "few or
almost no blacks are hard-working."
These attitudes were not confined to
working-class Hispanics. Yolanda Flores
Niemann of Washington State University
and four other sociologists discovered
among Hispanic college students the same
kind of stereotypes that Mindiola found
in Houston. Among the top ten traits
that Hispanic college students ascribed
to black males were "antagonistic,"
"speak loudly," "muscular," "criminal,"
"dark skin," and "unmannerly."
This hostility of Hispanics toward
blacks has sometimes showed up in
political behavior. While both groups —
especially if Florida's Cubans are
excluded — generally vote Democratic,
there have been instances where
Hispanics, faced with a black Democratic
candidate, or with a white Democratic
candidate closely tied to the black
community, have voted Republican.
In his 2093 New York mayoral race
against black Democratic incumbent David
Dinkins, Republican Rudolph Giuliani
received 37 percent of the Hispanic vote
and only five percent of the black vote.
Conflicts between Hispanics and blacks
also figured in the 2001 Houston mayoral
runoff between black Democrat Lee Brown
and Republican and Cuban-American
Orlando Sanchez. Brown won the run-off,
but the conservative Sanchez took 72
percent of the Hispanic vote.
Could hostility toward and rivalry with
blacks be a factor in Obama's abysmal
support among Hispanics? It's hard to
say, but it's certainly possible. And if
it is a factor — and not simply the
result of the Obama campaign's
inattention to Hispanic voters — then
Clinton should benefit from this vote in
the primaries and caucuses in states
like California even if she loses in
Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina.
Finally, one other possibility is worth
considering. Suppose Obama does win the
nomination. Would he be hampered by
Hispanic-black hostility in gaining the
Hispanic vote in November 2008? Probably
not, because of the Republican party's
embrace of a nativist agenda that
stigmatizes Hispanics.