Election Unspun's Dori Smith speaks to Latino voters in Connecticut who say
issues important to them are health care, the war in Iraq, and the economy
I would like to see the Latino vote or the Hispanic vote
get behind someone who is going to get the country together.
Juan Arreola and his family were having a night out in Willimantic,
Connecticut at the Third Thursday Street Festival, a popular monthly feast
and party. He is unsure who he'll vote for:
"Anybody who is like Bill Richardson, he's a well rounded politician
and he can probably appease anybody and everybody and we need to end the
war and hopefully he'll be able to do that, and lower food prices."
His wife Dayna McDermit-Arreola is a Democratic Registrar of Voters
in Connecticut:
"But my little girl, I had the news on and we don't discuss politics with
her but she said Oh, yeah he's gonna run for President! Obama's is! And I
said are you voting for him? And she said yeah, and I said why, and she said
because he's brown like me."
Dayna gladly supports Obama and she accepts that race is a big factor
in the election. But she warns against making assumptions about Latino voters.
"I've heard as many Republicans who intend to vote for Obama as I
have Democrats who aren't sure yet because their affiliation was more closely
with Hillary Clinton."
Both John Mccain and Barack Obama realize that Latino voters will
play a key role in the election. They are revamping their media outreach programs,
visiting Latino neighborhoods, and cultivating support from leaders of the
Latino community. Obama has one big advantage in that like George Bush he speaks
a bit of Spanish. Here he is with Puerto Rican voters:
"I was born on an island and I understand
that food, gas, and everything costs more."
John McCain has produced ads aimed at Latino viewers by including Spanish
subtitles. His campaign put Hessy Fernandez of the Republican National Committee
on the tap during their conference calls in case members of the Hispanic media
have questions. On her first day Fernandez didn't get any questions:
Hessy Fernandez: Oh no. There was no Hispanic press on this call.
Fernandez said McCain's message on specific issues would appeal to
Latino voters:
"Everything I believe, family values, economic policies,
national security."
Latino voters like Angel Crispin, a laundry worker in Willimantic,
say they're looking for new, more personal messages.
" I think it's something different, a new generation of young blood
to see what they can do in society today, in this world today."
Otha Cannon, OC, is a Chef at the University of Connecticut. He plans
to vote for Obama because of the Iraq War and the economy.
"Let's stop the war now. Too many of our kids is not coming back home.
Let's deal with what's going on here at home in the United States because
I believe in a couple more years believe it or not you can't say but that
the United States is going to turn into a third world country too."
In 2007 New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson referred to Latino voters
as a sleeping giant. That giant is now clearly awake. Latino voters are expected
to make up 10 percent of the electorate in 2008.
Interview: Roberto Lavato, writer for New American Media
As McCain is from Arizona, a southwestern state with a large number of Latino
immigrants, and as Barack Obama, for the first time in decades, working to
turn the southwestern states of Nevada, Colorado, and New Mexico Democrat,
and with Florida in play, Latino's will be a crucial voting block. Roberto
Lavato, writer for New American Media and the Nation Magazine.
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