CALIFORNIA (By Timm Herdt) August 20, 2005 -
Nothing can get a Republican political strategist in
California worked into a state of wistful
hopefulness, or a Democratic strategist into a state
of defensive denial, quite like suggesting that the
future of the Latino vote is up for grabs.
Latinos have been an essential and reliable element
of the Democratic coalition that has dominated
California for the past decade.
Both sides are aware of that, and also know
something even more important: If that trend holds,
Republicans will become a permanent and hopeless
minority party in the state.
In 20 years, the Census Bureau estimates, the
state's population will be 43 percent Latino and of
its projected 62 congressional districts, 28 will
have Latino voting majorities.
Given that, the most significant political question
of the early 21st century is whether the trend will
hold.
Both sides can cite theories, anecdotes and even
evidence to support their view -- Republicans, that
the tide is shifting; Democrats, that Latinos will
be a solid bloc of voting support into the future.
The question is essential not just to California
politics. On a national scale, growing Latino
populations in Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada,
Colorado, Florida and Texas will determine
presidential elections in the near future.
Some Republicans argue, in fact, that it has already
happened. Were it not for the fact that President
Bush fared better last fall than Republicans
historically have among Latinos, Arizona, Nevada and
Colorado could have gone the other way. Had that
happened, it wouldn't have mattered who won Ohio;
John Kerry would be president.
There were early estimates that Bush took as much as
44 percent of the Latino vote, but revised data from
the National Election Pool put the figure at 40
percent.
In the California recall election of 2003, Arnold
Schwarzenegger won in large part because of
significant Latino support, 32 percent.
If 40 percent and 32 percent don't sound like much,
consider that Bob Dole got just 21 percent in 1996
and Bill Simon received just 24 percent in his 2002
race for governor.
Is the political climate among Latinos changing?
The Democracy Corps, a national research
organization headed by former Clinton pollster
Stanley Greenberg, sought last month to take the
political temperature of American Latinos.
Democrats and Republicans alike can take some heart
in what it found.
"The key thing is that Democrats can't take this
group for granted," said analyst Matt Hogan. "We
can't afford to be complacent."
Perhaps the most interesting finding in the survey
of 1,000 Latinos was that, although many more
identify themselves as Democrats (54 percent) than
as Republicans (26 percent), they aren't as
inflexible as much of the rest of the nation.
Most core Democratic constituent groups, Hogan
noted, tend to be as strongly anti-Republican as
they are pro-Democrat. The inverse applies to
Republican constituencies.
But Latinos seem to be genuinely open-minded.
One of Greenberg's signature questions is to ask
respondents to give a temperature score to different
subjects, with 100 degrees signifying very warm,
favorable feelings and 0 degrees meaning very cold,
unfavorable feelings.
The mean temperature for Democrats was 60 degrees.
For Republicans, 48 degrees.
"They don't have the hostility toward Republicans
that the other Democratic groups do," Hogan said.
"They're basically divided on Republicans."
Bush's performance among Latinos proves the point.
His relative popularity shows that Latino voters
look for more than a party label. One worrisome
issue for Republicans, however, is what will happen
to the national Latino vote after Bush is gone.
Exhibit One from the poll: 30 percent said they
believe Bush "accepts different cultures," but only
18 percent said they believed that true of the
Republican Party as a whole.
On the question of moral values -- the buzz words of
analysts in the aftermath of Bush's victory -- there
were some surprising results.
While 24 percent cited "lack of respect for life,
including abortion," as a moral concern, the single
greatest moral concern cited by Latinos was "so many
people living in poverty."
Writes Greenberg: "At the heart of the consciousness
of Hispanic voters is a strong concern for the poor
.... They believe in community and mutual support,
using the government to create opportunity for all."
All in all, a worthy message for both parties to
take under advisement as they strive to win the
hearts of an increasingly important electorate.
Timm Herdt is chief of The Star's state bureau.
His political web log is at
http://www.TimmHerdt.com.