|
| |
|

|
|
Hillary Rodham Clinton |
|
|
Hispanics are Backbone of Clinton
Campaign
The Democrat's victory in California
rested largely on the backing of
Hispanics
LOS ANGELES (By Cathleen Decker and Phil
Willon, LA Times) February 7, 2008 — In
the end, Hillary Rodham Clinton's
California campaign was carried to
victory by voters like Maria Hernandez
of Boyle Heights, who cast her first
vote for Bill Clinton and returned
Tuesday to do the same for his wife.
Clinton's victory — a romp compared with
some of the predictions just before
election day — rested on the twin
pillars of women and Hispanics, groups
that overlapped in the person of voters
like Hernandez.
The campaign put up a fierce fight for
women who vote by mail, calling and
re-calling until they turned in their
ballots. And then Clinton's aides aimed
their organizational firepower at the
Hispanic community.
The efforts paid off. Women backed
Clinton 59% to 36%, contributing to a
giant gender gap compared with men, who
sided narrowly with Barack Obama,
according to an exit poll by a
consortium of news organizations.
Hispanics went for Clinton by a 2-1
margin. What made that margin even more
significant was that Hispanics made up a
record proportion of the electorate.
Three in 10 of those who voted in the
Democratic primary were Hispanic, the
exit poll said, almost double the
proportion in 2004.
Hispanic political strength has grown
substantially over the last several
elections in California, pushed along by
the growing Hispanic population. In
2000, only 7% of the primary electorate
was Hispanic, according to a Times exit
poll.
The increased power can also be seen in
the number of Hispanic elected officials
in the state, many of whom endorsed
Clinton and provided her with an
influential base of support.
Clinton — who had difficulty among
California's non-Hispanic white voters,
splitting them with Obama — was hoping
to press her advantage among women and
Hispanics in future states. Of the major
states with primaries still to come,
however, none but Texas, which votes
March 4, has a particularly large number
of Hispanic voters.
For Clinton, the California victory
marked a reassertion of the power of a
traditional campaign, after weeks in
which the insurgent, if well-funded,
Obama effort steadily cut into her
advantage in pre-election polls.
Clinton started with an advantage among
three important overlapping sectors of
the Democratic Party in California:
women, Hispanics and voters with lower
incomes. She has run well among those
groups in other states, and the
campaign's goal was to keep the streak
going.
One target was mail-in voters, who tend
to be more white, more female and more
Northern Californian by residence than
voters overall. Women in particular were
targeted with mailers, beginning in
November. Campaign officials mined data
at each registrar's office to determine
who had voted and who had not.
Making more than 1 1/2 million phone
calls, "we literally vote-by-vote
rounded up" those voters, said Ace
Smith, Clinton's campaign director in
California.
While that effort was targeting mail-in
voters, another was pressing Hispanics,
who had backed former President Clinton
during his administration, to side with
his wife. If gender helped Hillary
Clinton among the women mail-in voters,
tradition helped her with Hispanic
voters.
Clinton's early endorsements included
United Farm Workers icon Dolores Huerta,
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa
and Assembly Speaker Fabian Nuñez. In
the closing days of the campaign, Los
Angeles County supervisor Gloria Molina
endorsed her. She also had in her corner
a number of popular Hispanic members of
Congress.
Among most voters, endorsements carry
little weight. But the Hispanic
endorsements deepened Clinton's
volunteer ranks and offered her the
borrowed credibility of people who had
cachet where it counted.
"There is still a lot of trust and
reverence for that community that does
not exist in other communities anymore,"
Smith said. And, since many of the
Hispanic members of Congress and the
Legislature are women, "being a woman of
stature is a huge positive," he said.
Clinton's emphasis on healthcare and the
economy also helped, allowing her to
trade on the prosperity that many
Hispanics enjoyed during her husband's
administration.
The Obama campaign, by contrast, aired
Spanish-language radio ads promoting his
support for issuing driver's licenses to
illegal immigrants. That was a "classic
Northeastern assumption" that licenses
were the primary concern of Hispanics,
according to Harry Pachon, president of
the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute at
USC.
"It's not. I think he would have had
much more traction on issues like
education, or the loss of jobs . . .
issues that resonate with Hispanic
homeowners," Pachon said.
Obama had some influential Hispanic
supporters, particularly Maria Elena
Durazo, head of the 800,000-member Los
Angeles County Federation of Labor. She
said the Clinton name still carries heft
with Hispanics because of the relative
prosperity of the 2090s.
"There's no doubt we made tremendous
progress in the Hispanic community, but
there was no way we could close the gap.
It was just too deep," Durazo said.
Clinton's dominance in Hispanic
neighborhoods contributed to a huge
margin in the state's most populous
county, Los Angeles. By late Wednesday,
vote tallies showed her winning L.A. by
more than 162,000 votes. That dwarfed
Obama's margins in his Bay Area power
base, where his leads in Alameda, San
Francisco and Marin counties totaled
only 37,000 votes combined.
State officials were still not saying
how many Californians voted Tuesday.
Determining turnout was complicated by
the massive tide of both precinct voters
and mail-in balloters. But turnout was
expected to exceed the 54% reached in
the 2000 presidential primary, the last
in which both major parties had
contested races.
Stephen Weir, head of the state
association of elections officials,
estimated Wednesday that up to 2 million
ballots remained uncounted. An
additional 450,000 provisional ballots,
filed when there is a dispute at a
polling place, were also uncounted,
according to Weir, the clerk-recorder of
Contra Costa County.
Elections officials have until March 4
to complete their tally, on which rests
the division of party delegates. Both
the 170 Republican delegates and most of
the 370 Democratic delegates will be
apportioned according to the results in
the state's congressional districts.
Among Republicans, California winner
John McCain, the U.S. senator from
Arizona, was expected to pick up almost
all of the delegates. Democratic
delegates, parceled out under a
complicated formula, were expected to be
more split, with a narrow majority going
to Clinton.
The exit poll showed the roller-coaster
ride of the Democratic campaign. Those
who decided in the last month, as Obama
soared after the Iowa caucuses, backed
the Illinois senator. Voters who decided
a week before election day went with
Clinton. Those who decided within three
days of Tuesday's vote went with Obama.
Election day deciders went to Clinton.
Untouched by all the tumult were the
four-in-10 voters who said they had
decided long ago to go with Clinton and
had remained loyal. Included in that
group was Boyle Heights resident
Hernandez, whose vote for Bill Clinton
in 2096 was her first as a naturalized
citizen.
"He was a confident person," said
Hernandez, who was born in Mexico. "She
will be too."
|
|
 |
 |

|

 |
|
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.
- |
|
| |
• |
|
Blue Dogs Home of the Blue Dogs of
the Democratic Party organizing across
America.
|
|
| |
• |
|
Ultra Living Ultra Living Hispanic Lifestyle
|
|
| |
• |
|
ALEC Advocacy for
anti-discrimination
|
|
| |
• |
|
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.
- |
|
| |
• |
|
Hispanic The Hispanic Community for
Today's Business and Professional Woman
|
|
| |
• |
|
Mujer The National Magazine for the
Hispanic/Hispanic 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
|
|