www.PhxAZ.org

Jon@JonGarrido.com   602.244.1000

Paid by the Committee to Elect Jon Garrido to the Phoenix City Council, District 8


 


HOME

CONTENTS

RELATED ARTICLES

IMMIGRATION

WASHINGTON

2008 ELECTION

EDUCATION

CHURCH

HEALTH

HOUSING

AYUDA

CONTACT US

 

 

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.
 

 

 


2008 National Election Center


 

The Blue Dogs of the Democratic Party


Ayuda

 


Jon Garrido Network Mall — Sponsored Links

 

 

 

Jon Garrido News will be the largest video news website on the Internet for American Hispanics and Hispanics. National and local Hispanic news and editorials will be available for viewing.

-

 
 

 

Americause is America comes first. We begin with restoring manufacturing jobs.

 

 
 

 

Blue Dogs Home of the Blue Dogs of the Democratic Party organizing across America.

 

 
 

 

Ultra Living   Ultra Living Hispanic Lifestyle

 

 
 

 

Hispanic News is the largest news website on the Internet for American Hispanics and Hispanics providing daily news, editorials, articles of interest, plus home to the Hispanic News National Diabetes Center and the Hispanic News National Election Center. Hispanic News is ranked number 1 at Google, Yahoo and MSN.

-

 
 

 

Latina The Latina Community for Today's Business and Professional Woman

 

 
 

 

Mujer The National Magazine for the Hispanic/Latina Woman

 

 
 

 

Jon Garrido for Phoenix City Council

 

 
 

 

Act Arizona

 

 
 

 

Latin America News is the largest website on the Internet covering Mexico, the Caribbean, Central and South America. Latin America News is the premier business website of Latin America.

-

 
 

 

Arizona News  Premier Arizona News website which includes Arizona 2008 Election Center with focus on Phoenix.

-

 
 

 

The US Times National USA news. The U.S. Times includes the National 2008 Election Center.

-

 

 

 

51 Plus is the number one ranked website for America's active Baby Boomers. 51 Plus is number 1 of 243,000,000 websites at Google.

 

 

Buy a link to your website


 

 • JonGarrido.com The Jon Garrido Companies

 • Jon Garrido News National News Videos

 • Hispanic News Google Rank 1 of 65 million

  Kid Town   Where Kids Learn English

 • Act Arizona

 • Mujer  Hispanic women monthly magazine

  Chica  Magazine for young Hispanic girls

 • Latina  Business and Professional Women

 • Subete  Opportunities for Hispanics

 • Latin America News     Rank 1 by MSN

 • Hispanic

 • Jon Garrido for Phoenix City Council

 • 51 Plus Rank 1 Baby Boomer site by Google

 • US Times        Rank 1 by MSN

 • Arizona News        Rank 2 by MSN

 • World News

 • Ultra Living   Ultra Living Hispanic Lifestyle

 • Blue Dogs   The Blue Dogs of the Democrats

 • For Sale By Owner USA

 • Phoenix News

 • Hispanic News 2005 Archive

 • Hispanic News 2006 Archive

 • Hispanic News 2007 Archive

 • US Times 2005 Archive


The number 1 Hispanic website in the United States. Google, Yahoo or MSN: Hispanic News

Google ranks Hispanic News Number 1 of 65 million websites.

Yahoo ranks Hispanic News number 1 of 40.4 million websites.

MSN ranks Hispanic News number 1 of 26.9 million websites.

 

The Jon Garrido Network

 

Published, Web Design and Hosted by The Jon Garrido Network, Phoenix, AZ 85016, 602.244.1000 Jon@JonGarrido.com

 

www.jongarrido.com  www.kidtown.us  www.jgnet.net  www.hispanic9.com  www.jongarridohomes.com  www.fsbousa.us  www.phxnews.us  www.hispanic.cc  www.uschica.com  www.latina.ms  www.mujerusa.us  www.subete.us  www.aznews.us  www.lamnews.com  www.ustimes.us  www.wnews.us  www.bluedogs.us  www.51plus.com  www.hispanic5.com  www.hispanic6.com  www.hispanic7.com  www.ustimes5.com  www.actarizona.org  www.azlec.org  www.aqaba.us  www.ultravida.us  www.phxaz.org    www.webstore.bz