Everyone's an Expert on the Latino Vote, Except Latinos
The most interesting development out of this weekend's Nevada caucus votes had little to do with Hillary Clinton winning a large percentage of the Latino vote -- that was predictable. More fascinating was the sudden and exponential surge in the number of experts in Latino politics.
It was tragicomic to watch non-Spanish speaking pundits explain the 'reality' of the Nevada vote while standing in the artificial light of the casinos during one of the first caucus meetings held entirely in Spanish. Reporters had to wait for translators to tell them what campaign workers were saying before they could report it to us. Understanding the electoral needs of casino, hotel, restaurant and other workers who labor in a new economy -- and require new hours for voting -- proved very difficult for many in the media to understand.
It was no less difficult having to watch the white, and some African-American, political commentators on MSNBC, CNN and other networks tell us that the Latino vote for Clinton reflected "black-Latino tensions." The New York Times newspaper had earlier echoed these observations in a story that caused frustration in the Latino blogosphere. In a recent issue of The New Yorker, a publication that has no Latino editorial staff and publishes very few stories a year about the country's 46 million Latinos, the magazine showed off its newfound expertise in a story which detailed how Latinos are Clinton's electoral "firewall," thanks to the "lingering tensions between the Hispanic and black communities." It's hard to know how they know this when only one serious polling organization in the country conducts polls in a language other than English.
Yet everybody, it seems, has something to say about Latino politics. Everybody that is, except Latinos.
The awkwardness and simplicity seen and heard in the coverage of the Latino electorate illustrates how ill-equipped the news organizations, the political parties and the society as a whole are to understand and deal with the historic political shift previewed in Nevada: the death of the black-white electorate. Simplistic talk about the Latino vote provides another example of how we live when the 'experts' and their organizations are increasingly out of touch with the dynamism and complexity of the electorate and the general populace.
As a result, the growth of the very diverse Latino electorate will likely force the revelation of more inconvenient truths. Principle among them is the media's conclusion that anti-black racism among Latinos explains why they voted Clinton and not Obama in Nevada. Story after story tries to fit the Latino vote into the procrustean bed of old-school, black v. white politics.
Typical of these conclusions are statements by the liberal New Republic's John Judis. He explained Latino support for Clinton this way: "Latino immigrants hold negative stereotypical views of blacks and feel that they have more in common with whites than with blacks." Judis backed his claims with a modicum of academic seriousness as he quoted "experts" like Duke University political scientist Paula D. McClain. McClain told me in an interview that she neither speaks Spanish nor watches the primary source of Latino news and political information, saying: "I don't watch Univision." Quoting her makes little practical sense.
It only makes sense when we consider how ever-expanding Latino power in Nevada and across the country is pushing up against people's fraying sense of nationhood and citizenship. Latino citizens and voters, not undocumented immigrants, are the targets of many liberals. These liberals long for the simpler days of a black-white electorate, a less-globalized country. Like Clinton, Obama and all Republican candidates, they support the political and racial equivalents of the anti-immigrant, anti-Latino border wall.
So instead of considering that Latinos reflect the new complexities of our political age, we should, experts tell us, simply swallow the black-white political logic of the previous era, like the half-moon cookies our grandmothers made. Ignore whatever you think of the Clintons -- they have more than 15 years of relationships, name-recognition and history in the Latino electorate. Outside of Chicago, Obama has less than two years. Never mind that Latinos may still be wondering about why Obama did not, until recently, secure the support of most black voters. Never mind about the political amnesia about how the country's last black candidate of national stature -- Jesse Jackson -- defied the prevailing racial logic during the Presidential primaries of 1988, when his Rainbow Coalition secured almost 50 percent of the Latino vote in Latino-heavy New Mexico counties like Santa Fe and San Miguel and 36 percent of the Latino vote in the largest Latino state in the country: California.
The Latino experience of the right-of-center Clintons and the left-of-center Jackson, who the Illinois senator did not ask to campaign for him, raises questions about Mr. Obama's political operation and his political agenda. Time will tell us what was behind the Latino support for Clinton in Nevada. And who knows, maybe the experts telling us about Obama, Clinton and other candidates' fortunes in upcoming primaries will do so without the black and white lens that has proven obsolete in the face of a new country.
Roberto Lovato is a New York-based contributing Associate Editor with New America Media and a frequent contributor to The Nation Magazine. You can find him posting regularly on media, migration, politics and other issues at his blog, www.ofamerica.wordpress.com.
Copyright © 2008 HuffingtonPost.com, Inc.
Twitter
StumbleUpon
Facebook
Delicious
Digg
Newsvine
Google
Yahoo
Technorati
8 Comments so far
Show All@agnorealist January 23rd, 2008 11:50 pm
I didn't say the college students were useless, I said they were not the only factor.
Like it or not, corn is an issue in the Midwest.
Obama's work so far as a senator impacts Midwest politics more concretely than Nevada or the West. The time his campaign was
on the ground in Iowa must also be coupled with his time as a Midwest legislator, and the impact
his support of corn, but also bills supporting Midwestern politics had on the vote. I realize "all" democrats support biofuel and ethanol,
but Obama was instrumental in getting bills past to pay for additional services such as
having the federal government pay for half of the price for new pump construction. Equally,
Obama with three other Midwest candidates lobbied to keep the tariff on Brasilian sugarcane
biofuel, equaling roughly .52 cents on every gallon of Brasilian import . I would have
to be unaware of Obama's impact and voting record when trying to argue it didn't have an impact
on padding the home advantage for corn and ethanol.
All democratic candidate's may indeed be for alternative fuels, Obama just happened to
help out the Midwest the best with his voting record. Obama doesn't have enough time in Nevada
or the west to secure trust. Believe it or not. Take it with a grain of salt.
ciao
This is very sad, tragic. Why don't these people realise that Hillary Clinton is already unfit for serving in public political office, so certainly unfit to be president?.
Why do people, voters, constantly need to be making screwed up choices; why can't people get with finally growing up and thinking about voting in terms of not them- or our-selves alone, and not based on fears, but in terms of what the society and therefore general population need, so based on sound principles? I know; greed, selfishness, pointy-headedness, narrow-mindedness, ignorance, etc. But still, it's good to grow up never having been greed-encultured, or to replace it with thinking about [society], not only ourselves; never putting ourselves on a higher pedestal than we use when thinking of society.
Maybe none of these above "reasons" explain why the Latino voters are incredibly massing their support behind the least electable (in terms of merit, not superficial and damning popularity) DP candidate for 2008; but whatever the reasons are, they may be humanly understandable errors on the one hand, however while they're more importantly tragic. We should not be looking to make life nothing but tragicomedy. There is nothing at all comical about the evils reined on the world today.
To choose to vote for her is to either be insanely exercising sadism towards the world, maybe some masochism too, or to be severely ignorant, enough that the country should just eliminate democracy once and for all, doing it honestly this time, and replace it with a dictatorship. It's what we already have anyway; it's oligarchical, instead of being by or run by a single person, but it's still dictatorship, the team, "gang-bang" kind this time.
U.S. voters need to get their heads on their shoulders, well attached, not repeatedly lose it while only being occasionally lucky to accidentally find it again (if ever), and only for a short period of benefit (maybe some anyway).
Maybe these American Latinos are against Kucinich due to him wanting to end NAFTA, the WTO, and so on, but HE IS RIGHT and that's what matters; not our little individual self-interests, selfishness. And maybe he's right with respect to putting his support behind Obama instead of Edwards for a more likely candidate than himself to be nominated. Stephen Zunes had some interesting analyses posted at CD over the past week or two; two articles.
The Latinos would certainly know that Bill Clinton is mainly to "thank" for NAFTA, which profited many enough Latinos; and while I'm not sure about those in the U.S., I expect they'd still have reasons to be biased, that is, in favour of supporters of NAFTA, particularly its principal political "leader", Bill Clinton (and his behind-the-scenes bosses). Because of this, some people can be humanly expected to blindly support either or both Clintons in virtually any and all contexts, regardless of how very criminal and war criminal they are; but that's NO way to vote.
It'd be great to see the day when voters, and in majority, will vote, think, or live intelligently and responsibly, as real members of a real [society of many individuals]; etc. But I expect to never see this day in my lifetime; not the one on Earth anyway.
46MN Latinos in the U.S. and they're strongly for Hillary Clinton? "Man", we have fewer hopes by the day, every day, enough that the Nov. 2008 election will be worthy of only abstaining for many of us; very nearly only, anyway.
It's hell's rat race Americans are toying with and they don't know what it is; instead treating it superficially and as something fun to do. These are very dangerous times, but the danger's too barely recognised.
The Latinos apparently do not want the wars on Iraq, Afghanistan, and other countries aggressed by the West, esp. the U.S., to be stopped; they want continuation. It's what Hillary Clinton represents; it's what both her and Bill represent and work for.
Perhaps they care about NAFTA having profited Latinos in the U.S., while neglecting the harm caused to workers in Mexico, and to U.S. workers; many of both, too.
I don't think that any of this is what most American Latinos want or think, but they sure are voting in large number in this manner by supporting Clinton, so wittingly or not.
The Nov. 2008 presidential election can be thought of as if we're directly participating in the handling of nuclear bombs, WMD, or nitroglyceride, and that that "stuff" puts MANY lives in danger. I wouldn't treat the Nov. 2008 election any less lightly; if I vote, that is.
rob.price-
an Obama campaign problem was its limitation of investment. His teams were in Nevada for only ten months. Ten months isn't enough time in the community. Look to Iowa as an example.
Ten months was how long Obama's campaign was on the ground in Iowa. The difference is there are campaign operators who know the state to hire here. You can google John Norris.
I realize people argue the main reasons Obama was so damn successful in Iowa came from Oprah and a college
student rally. Obama political strength in Iowa/Midwest is helped by how he is positioned with corn and biofuel
industries, which equates to job and lifestyle security in corn country. Lifestyle and jobs equate community and
neighborhoods.
Obama got a lot of youth vote in Iowa. College kids even came back to my college town to caucus and this didn't much with Dean in 04. All the major Dem candidates support ethanol and bio-fuels so that's not a factor.
Si Dios fuera negro -mi compay- todo cambiarÃa
Fuera nuestra raza -mi compay- la que mandarÃa
Negro el presidente
Y el gobernador
Negro el abogado
Y negro el doctor compay
Si Dios fuera negro -mi compay- todo cambiarÃa
Fuera nuestra raza -mi compay- la que mandarÃa
Negra la azucena
Y negra la tiza
Negra Blanca Nieves
Negra Mona Lisa.
Si Dios fuera negro -mi compay- todo cambiarÃa
Fuera nuestra raza -mi compay- la que mandarÃa
Negro fuera el dÃa
Negro fuera el sol
Negra la mañana
Negro el algodón
Si Dios fuera negro -mi compay- todo cambiarÃa
Fuera nuestra raza -mi compay- la que mandarÃa
Negro fuera el Papa
Y negro el ministro
Los angeles negros
Negro Jesus Cristo -compay-
Canción de Roberto Angleró cantada por Rubén Blades
Author argues the narrow interpretation of Nevada outcome is based on the racial stereotyping by a largerly
non-Spanish speaking national media. ...
Also, fifteen years v. two years of national spotlight is a good point --if people want to listen.
Equal point of fact, Obama didn't bring in Jesse Jackson. Thus, according to the author, it brings up
the issue of where Obama sits politically. That's an issue with Obama --people still don't know exactly
where he stands. This confusion of message is a crucial step Obama must get past if he is going to be
able to secure the trust of the voter. Trust and loyalty are big hurdles. His opponents are using this ambiguity
to their advantage. ("I might cut the heads off bunnies, but at least you know where I stand!" said his opponent.)
But back to Nevada, specifically., an Obama campaign problem was its limitation of investment. His teams were
in Nevada for only ten months. Ten months isn't enough time in the community. Look to Iowa as an example.
I realize people argue the main reasons Obama was so damn successful in Iowa came from Oprah and a college
student rally. Obama political strength in Iowa/Midwest is helped by how he is positioned with corn and biofuel
industries, which equates to job and lifestyle security in corn country. Lifestyle and jobs equate community and
neighborhoods.
Loyalty and trust is built on longer investments in the community, administered with consistent weight,
thus alleviating contradictions.
At this juncture, much of Obama's national image, and thus strength, corresponds more with preaching,
than with administering --a hard place to fight from when trying to win the presidency.
Latinos are not a homogenous group. Blacks are not a homogenous group. Asians are not a homogenous group. Caucasians are not a homogenous group. Repeat, repeat, repeat, repeat.
The need for a bilingual segment of the media is painfully obvious. While the descendants of the Know-Nothings can demand English Only (and so many of them speak it so badly), having reporters who can work in either tongue is necessary to improve the information flow nationwide.
Mr. Lovato's point is well taken. It's a new century--hell, a new millenium--and too much of the current racial politics are still mired in the post Civil War period's mistakes. Time for a new way of thinking. Of course, given that outdated mindset, getting that new way is going to be like driving a NASCAR stock car through a minefield at eighty miles an hour.