Immigration Reform Voter Mobilizing
Groups look to 2012
SANTA FE, NM
(By
Elise Foley,
Washington Independent)
November 8, 2010
—
As the dust settles from the 2010
midterm elections, Hispanic and
immigrant rights groups that worked
to register Hispanics and newly
naturalized citizens to vote this
year said they are now looking at
how they can influence the elections
in 2012.
Their central message: Hispanics,
already the largest and
fastest-growing minority group in
the country, will continue to gain
power as a voting bloc until it
becomes impossible for candidates
deemed anti-immigrant to win
elections.
“We built this infrastructure to
mobilize voters to support our
friends,” Field Director Rudy Lopez
of Campaign for Community Change
said on a conference call. “For
those who choose not to be our
friends, go ask Ken Buck and Sharron
Angle how they feel about the
election results.”
This year’s efforts in Arizona,
California, Colorado, Nevada and
Washington included canvassing for
votes and massive voter registration
drives. The numbers differ on how
many Hispanics turned out to vote:
Exit polls report Hispanics made up
eight percent of the electorate this
year, the same as in 2006, while a
poll of Hispanic voters the night
before the election estimated
turnout would be up from the
previous midterm elections.
Hispanics may be to thank for some
Democrat victories, but at least
this year, the pattern of
anti-immigrant candidates losing
doesn’t hold true in all states —
particularly non-Western ones.
Hazleton, Pa., Mayor Lou Barletta
(R), who presided over a
now-overturned law to drive out
undocumented immigrants, won his
race for the House. Arizona Gov. Jan
Brewer (R) won re-election after
signing SB 1070, and Florida’s Rick
Scott (R) won the governor’s race
while pledging to create copycat
legislation in his state.
Still, immigrant rights groups have
a point: Demographic evidence does
point to Hispanics making up an
increasing share of the electorate.
Given a majority of Hispanic voters
support comprehensive immigration
reform that includes options for
some of the undocumented immigrants
already in the country to stay,
enforcement-only candidates are
unlikely to receive major Hispanic
support.
It’s a message at least some
Republicans have heard. At a panel
on immigration policy and
conservatism in August, several
advocates of lower undocumented
immigration numbers said the GOP
should be careful to avoid
alienating voters through rhetoric
against immigration.
Failed California governor hopeful
Meg Whitman (R) attempted to soften
her immigration positions to appeal
to Hispanic voters late in her
campaign — which arguably could have
worked if she hadn’t made hard-line
immigration stances a focus of her
GOP primary.
Although immigrant rights groups
said Hispanics would not be won over
by anti-undocumented immigration
rhetoric, all went so far as to say
they were mobilizing voters
specifically for the Democratic
Party.
The mantra for all voter registering
groups is, “All
candidates if they want a chance at
the presidency, they can’t ignore
us.”