- Originally published in the Los Angeles Times on September 25, 2004
Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times
Latino Vote Still Lags Its Potential;
The Southwest influx leans Democratic but is not registering fast enough to help Kerry.
By Ronald Brownstein and Kathleen Hennessey, Times Staff Writers
Block
by block, house by house, Cesar Auyb and Irene Rodriguez are literally
changing the complexion of politics in Nevada. But the change is coming
slowly.
Since May, the two have been on
leave from their jobs in Las Vegas casinos to work as organizers for a
union-sponsored, nonprofit organization trying to increase voter
registration among the state's exploding Latino population. On
a bright and breezy morning last weekend, each was diligent and
cheerful as they pursued potential voters in a heavily Latino neighborhood west of the downtown strip.
But
in an hour of door knocking, each registered just one new voter.
Everyone else they encountered was ineligible to register, many because
they had not taken the steps to become U.S. citizens, even though they
met the legal requirements.
In miniature, the experience of Auyb and Rodriguez shows how the continuing influx of Latinos
is reshaping the partisan balance across the desert Southwest -- and
why the transformation may not arrive fast enough to help Sen. John F.
Kerry erase President Bush's advantage in the region this November.
Slowly but inexorably, activists across the region are moving more Latinos
to the polls; even with the difficulties experienced by Auyb, Rodriguez
and other canvassers, their group, 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.
"The pool of potential voters lags way behind the growth
in the Hispanic population," said Maria Cardona, director of the Latino
outreach project at the New Democratic Network, a centrist Democratic
group.
That gap means that Latinos,
who could tip any of the Southwest's four battleground states to Kerry,
are more likely to play a supporting rather than starring role in this
year's fight for the region's 29 electoral votes.
"The longer-term implications for Latino empowerment in what we are
seeing are great," said Louis DeSipio, a political scientist at UC
Irvine who specializes in Latino politics. "But they aren't necessarily
in this election."
Still, with most Latinos
in the Southwest leaning Democratic, local Republicans recognize that
if they cannot improve their support within this bloc, their political
position likely will grow increasingly insecure in these states.
"We
are getting out into the community and going places where the
Republican Party never went," said Jose Esparza, chairman of the
Arizona Latino Republican Assn. "For whatever reason, 10 years ago that wasn't happening."
The
impact of the region's changing demography is evident in the increased
attention from the presidential campaigns. From 1968 through 1988, the
Southwest was so reliably Republican in the national vote that it was
rarely contested.
But Bill Clinton, in his
two White House victories, carried Nevada and New Mexico twice and
Arizona and Colorado once each. In 2000, Bush won Nevada, Arizona and
Colorado, while Al Gore carried New Mexico. And neither candidate won
more than 51% of the vote in any of the four states.
This
year, each state has been closely contested. Both the Bush and Kerry
campaigns have purchased English and Spanish-language television ads in
all four. Although the Massachusetts senator recently stopped buying TV
time -- in either language -- in Arizona and Colorado, the Democratic
National Committee has continued to broadcast ads in both.
The
New Democratic Network has spent heavily on a Spanish-language
television advertising campaign in the region stressing historic ties
between Latinos and Democrats. And Republican outreach efforts are burgeoning in all four states.
"It's
probably something that should have happened years ago, but I'm glad
the national party is putting a priority on this," said Lionel Rivera,
the Republican mayor of Colorado Springs, Colo.
The
latest public polls have shown Bush staking out a solid lead in
Arizona, ahead more narrowly in Nevada and in tight races with Kerry in
New Mexico and Colorado.
More than any other single factor, it has been the Latino community's
steady growth that has moved these states from reliably Republican
toward the tossup category.
From 1990 through 2002, the Latino
population soared by 272% in Nevada, 115% in Arizona, 93% in Colorado
and 38% from a larger base in New Mexico, according to census figures. Latinos
now constitute about a fifth of the population in Nevada and Colorado,
more than a fourth in Arizona and more than two-fifths in New Mexico.
Despite the increasing GOP outreach efforts, polls indicate most Latino
voters in these states still prefer Democrats. In 2000, Gore carried
about two-thirds of the Latino vote in each, according to the Voter
News Service exit polls.
That
strong performance, combined with the rapid population growth, fuels
the Democratic hope that as these states become more heavily Latino, they also will lean more heavily Democratic.
The rub has been translating the Latino population increase into election-day clout.
The chasm between the Latino population and the Latino
vote frustrates civil rights groups, unions and Democrats. It may be
especially galling for Democrats in Nevada, because the state is so
small and, in the last three presidential elections, neither party has
carried it by more than 21,600 votes.
The large pool of unregistered Latinos shimmers before Democrats like an oasis in the desert. But it's proved more a mirage.
"So
far, they haven't really turned out to vote," said David Damore, a
political scientist at the University of Nevada Las Vegas. "Latinos remain the great untapped hope of Democratic Party here."
Time
with Auyb and Rodriguez shows how hard Nevada activists are working to
change that -- and the continuing barriers they face.
The Latino
mobilization effort may be organizationally strongest in Nevada because
of the heavy union presence in Las Vegas. Auyb and Rodriguez are
members of the powerful Culinary Workers Union Local 226, which
represents about 50,000 workers in Las Vegas, almost all of them casino
workers and about 40% Latinos.
Three
years ago, the union provided key financing to establish the nonprofit
Citizenship Project, which promotes citizenship and voter registration
among Latinos. The group has sent Auyb, Rodriguez and eight other Local
226 members knocking on doors in more than 100 heavily Latino
neighborhoods five days a week since May.
The
canvassers have been baked by 115-degree heat, chased out of apartment
buildings by landlords and, in Rodriguez's case, bitten by a Doberman
puppy. But they have also signed up those 3,000 new voters, potentially
a critical number in a state so evenly divided.
Yet in that period, the canvassers have also contacted 20,000 Latinos
who were not eligible to register, said Pilar Maria Weiss, assistant
political director at Local 226.
That
ratio was evident as Auyb and Rodriguez canvassed along streets of
weathered ranch homes that testified to the economic strains of those
living inside. Some of those the two encountered were in the U.S.
illegally; most were legal residents who had not taken the steps to
become a U.S. citizen.
Over time, Weiss argued, the key to significantly increasing Latino
influence in Nevada is the Citizenship Project's program to encourage
more of those eligible to obtain citizenship -- an initiative that sets
the group apart from most voter mobilization efforts. "We know we have
to plant the seeds for the '06 or '08 elections," she said.
But for 2004, that leaves the group measuring its gains in feet, not yards.
To
the canvassers, each new voter is as precious as a seedling -- and
deserving of as much careful nurturing. Auyb, a floor maintenance
specialist at the MGM Grand Hotel, spent more than five minutes in
animated conversation convincing the one man he signed up to register.
And Auyb was already planning his return.
"Right
now, he can register, but maybe he's not going to ... vote," Auyb said
on his way to the next door. "So in October, we're going to be back
here."
Brownstein reported from Las Vegas, Hennessey from Washington.