LOS ANGELES (By Teresa Watanabe, LA
Times) July 19, 2008 Buoyed by a
surge of political interest among
immigrants and youth, nine national
Hispanic organizations Friday
announced a joint effort to register
as many as 2 million new voters as
presidential candidates from both
parties vie for their community's
increasingly influential support.
The $5-million nonpartisan voter
registration effort, announced at a
national Hispanic forum in downtown
Los Angeles, comes amid an
unprecedented campaign by community
organizations and Spanish-language
media to boost Hispanic civic
participation and two new reports
showing signs of success.
The U.S. government last week
reported that the number of Mexican
immigrants who became citizens last
year swelled by 50%, with hundreds
of thousands more in line to process
their naturalization applications.
Community leaders Friday expressed
even more excitement about a new
study by the Texas-based William C.
Velasquez Institute, a nonpartisan
public policy and research
organization that found more than 1
million Hispanics had registered to
vote during this primary season,
including 500,000 in California and
Texas.
The biggest buzz centered around who
most of the new voters are: not new
U.S. citizens as expected, but
American-born youth under age 30.
That demographic is notoriously
difficult to reach but makes up
three-fourths of the Hispanic
community's 8 million eligible but
unregistered voters, according to
Antonio Gonzalez of the Southwest
Voter Registration Education Project
in Los Angeles.
"I was shocked by the increase in
young new voters," Gonzalez said.
"They're typically the hardest to
reach."
Gonzalez said he had expected that
newly naturalized, older Hispanics
would make up the bulk of new
voters. But government delays in
processing more than 1 million
pending naturalization applications
had jeopardized the chances of
significantly boosting those
numbers. Although U.S. officials
told immigrant rights groups earlier
this year that they aimed to process
three-fourths of the pending
applications by September, the New
York-based Puerto Rican Legal
Defense and Education Fund has filed
a class-action lawsuit against the
federal government to expedite the
process.
The new voter mobilization campaign
would largely target younger voters
through 125 organizing committees in
12 states, including California,
Gonzalez said.
In separate efforts, New York-based
Voto Hispanic has specifically
targeted the youth vote with public
service announcements by Cameron
Diaz and other popular Hispanic
actors, videos, community blogs and
advertisements on popular radio
stations in the Bay Area. Since
January, the effort has registered
18,000 young voters, according to
Maria Teresa Petersen of Voto
Hispanic.
Several young people who attended
the Hispanic forum in Los Angeles
said they were moved to register to
vote for the first time this primary
season because of excitement over
Democratic candidate Barack Obama
and concern over the nation's
plummeting economy, immigration
system and continuing wars in Iraq
and Afghanistan.
Omar Cruz, a 21-year-old public
relations student at the University
of Texas in El Paso, said he "never
took interest" in politics before.
But this primary season, he said,
the election was the talk of the
campus and several student groups
organized voter registration drives.
As a young Hispanic living near a
military base and the U.S.-Mexico
border in El Paso, he said ending
U.S. involvement in Iraq and
reforming the immigration system
were urgent issues.
Cruz said he plans to vote for Obama
as does Rafael Mora, a 24-year-old
UC Santa Cruz student studying
history and economics.
Both said Obama's multicultural
background and modest economic
upbringing appealed to them.
"The majority of Hispanics come from
a humble background and may feel
that Obama can relate to them more,"
Mora said.
Not all new young voters are
pro-Obama, however. Valerie Simone,
a 23-year-old El Paso College
student, said she plans to vote for
Republican candidate John McCain
because she believes he would be
more fiscally responsible and would
crack down on welfare abuse.
"I feel Democrats vote more for
handouts," she said.
The young Hispanics were among an
estimated 1,500 people from 300
organizations expected to attend the
third annual National Hispanic
Congreso, a three-day public policy
forum that began Friday.
Participants were expected to
discuss ways to take action on more
than 150 resolutions approved in
previous gatherings, including
appeals to end the war, investigate
Hispanic student underachievement,
better cooperate with Latin America
and adopt immigration reform that
would legalize the nation's 12
million undocumented immigrants.
Presidential politics and
immigration reform dominated
discussion during Friday's opening
media briefing.
Community leaders hailed both McCain
and Obama for appearing at three
Hispanic conventions in recent
weeks. But leaders said both
candidates still had work to do to
obtain their vote.
John Trasviρa, president of the
Mexican American Legal Defense and
Educational Fund, said he wanted to
see the next president end
immigration raids, put a moratorium
on the use of local police in
immigration enforcement, and appoint
a Homeland Security chief who would
suspend immigration raids during the
2010 Census to ensure a more
accurate count, among other things.
Although polls show that Obama is
leading McCain by a margin of 2 to 1
among Hispanics, Gonzalez said,
neither candidate has locked up the
vote.
"In addressing the substantive
issues of concern to Hispanics,"
Gonzalez said, "both candidates are
lacking."