Latino Vote Still Lags Its Potential
Tuesday, September 28, 2004 at 07:14PM
TheSpook

Much of the Electorate is Latino but not on Election day:
Latino Vote Still Lags Its Potential
Slowly but inexorably, activists across the Southwest region of teh country are moving more Latinos to the polls; the Citizenship Project, has registered 3,000 new Latino voters in Las Vegas this year. Such progress is gradually strengthening Democratic prospects not only in Nevada and New Mexico, swing states in recent presidential elections, but also in Colorado and Arizona, which the GOP has dominated. In all four states, Latinos make up a larger share of voters today than in 1992. And they are a reliably Democratic block.  Experts in both parties agree that eventually, this demographic trend could give the Southwest the largest concentration of tossup states outside of the industrial Midwest. But Latinos are still not registering and voting in numbers large enough to maximize their influence. As a result, in Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado and Arizona, Latinos represent a smaller share of the vote -- in some cases much smaller -- than their share of the population, according to exit polls on election days. Although Latinos are growing more important with each election, they are unlikely to become a decisive factor in these states until they overcome the barriers to political participation that plagued the canvassers in Las Vegas. .
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Article originally appeared on (http://brownwatch.com/).
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