|
|
McCain,
Obama and their Awkward
Hispanic Outreach
(AP) - Like eager but awkward
suitors,
Barack Obama and John McCain are working hard and sometimes fumbling in
their efforts to court Hispanic voters who could swing November's
presidential election. For the African-American Obama and white Anglo
McCain, the problem is less one of language than of trying to
understand a group whose own diversity can make it a mystery to others.
It's not a simple matter of saying, "Take me to your leaders." But
that, in essence, is the ground game the presidential candidates and
their campaigns have been playing in pitching to voters who could form
decisive constituencies in critical battleground states.
"They just come to me and say, 'Who are the bosses of the Latin
community?'" said Patrick Manteiga, who runs a family-owned newspaper
for Hispanics in Tampa's historic Cuban neighborhood of Ybor City.
"That's like coming and asking, 'Who are the bosses of white America,
of the soccer moms?'"
Both candidates are pressing their case in three speeches in as many
weeks to Hispanic umbrella groups and working in other ways to make
their outreach more sophisticated. Republicans have opened an office in
Orlando, where most of the state's Puerto Ricans live, and Obama opens
one this week in Ybor City.
They've both got their work cut out for them in appealing to a large
and growing segment of the population that has leaned Democratic but
has not always been motivated to vote. A recent AP-Yahoo News poll
found Obama leading McCain 47 percent to 22 percent among Hispanic
voters, with 26 percent undecided.
McCain is respected by many Hispanics for refusing to pander to
anti-immigrant sentiment over the years. Yet he is viewed in some Latin
quarters as a sequel to the unpopular President Bush, a problem he has
with voters at large, too.
Obama's vitality and soaring oratory appeal to Hispanics just as they
do to others. Whoops of approval were heard throughout his speech this
week to the League of United Latin American Citizens' convention.
Yet Obama emerged from Democratic primaries a distant second to rival
Hillary Rodham Clinton among most Hispanic groups. Like voters at
large, Latino voters question the one-term senator's experience. And
there are tensions between blacks and Hispanics.
Hispanic voters are hardly monolithic. Some in the West have roots
going back more than two centuries, while others were sworn in as
citizens last week. Some consider themselves white and some black, and
many represent every shade in between.
During the last presidential election, Hispanics in key swing states
such as Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada and Florida represented anywhere
from 8 percent to more than 30 percent of voters, according to exit
polls, and their numbers are only expected to grow this year.
THE CLINTONITES
Clara Apodaca, 73, of Las Cruces, N.M., is among the Clinton supporters
who quickly made the shift to Obama. The longtime Democrat was hoping
to see a woman in the Oval Office, but she now believes Obama would be
the best candidate to handle the economy, the war and the country's
reputation.
"We're so badly thought of throughout the world," she said. "We need to
shore up our relationships."
Yet 64-year-old Denver resident Paul Sandoval, who was also a Clinton
supporter, has yet to make up his mind.
"Obama has not sold me that he's the best candidate, regardless if he's
a Democrat," the Mexican restaurant owner said as he served up eggs for
the morning crowd. "I'm going to wait. I'm going to see how they
perform on that stage, answering those hard questions."
And then there is Fernando Romero, a former casino executive and
longtime political organizer in Las Vegas. Romero advised Democratic
candidate Bill Richardson, but he calls Obama's relationship with
Hispanics shallow. For now, he's backing McCain.
"Unfortunately (Obama) is the one that we know nothing about and has
made little effort to communicate with us," Romero said. "There are so
many good qualities that Senator McCain has — and proven
qualities."
THE REPUBLICANS
The McCain campaign is counting on such voters, hoping they will judge
him as an individual and not a fixture of the Republican Party.
But the Republicans are seeing their own defections among Hispanic
voters, especially in Florida, where for the first time more are
registered as Democrats than Republicans.
McCain remains popular among Cuban-Americans in Miami, who tend to vote
Republican and admire his military record and his support for U.S.
policy toward Cuba. The campaign unveiled its Florida Hispanic steering
committee last week with names of roughly 100 active Hispanic
supporters from throughout the state. But a crowd of nearly 1,000
people, many of them Cuban-Americans, turned out to hear Obama speak at
a private luncheon in May. An Obama campaign sticker briefly peaked out
from the wall outside Little Havana's famed Versailles restaurant last
month, a traditional gathering point for Republican hard-liners.
Jesus Mendoza, 51, owner of the Tijerazo barber shop in Tampa,
explained his change of heart as he wielded his scissors.
I'm a true Republican," said the Puerto Rican native. "I believe people
should work hard and get less help. But the Republicans have been in
power for eight years, and I don't think things are better. Obama, he's
a young candidate, but he's intelligent. Even though I'm a Republican,
I'm not blind."
In Orlando, Angie Thillet, 38, who voted twice for Bush, is leaning
toward Obama because he proposes to get the country close to universal
health care.
Thillet went without insurance coverage for years, despite white-collar
jobs. She has insurance now through her employment at a funeral home,
yet she was afraid to go to the doctor after she hit her head in the
bathtub because her deductible is more than $1,200.
She doesn't like the hype surrounding Obama, especially comparisons to
John F. Kennedy. Still, she says, "I won't be voting for McCain."
If talk radio is any measure, Obama is making inroads. Magda Yvette
Torres, a two-time Bush supporter and host of a Spanish-language
program in central Florida, fielded calls heavily in favor of the
Democrat on one recent show.
"Most of my listeners supported Hillary Clinton, and a few months ago,
you would have heard a lot of these same people calling in to criticize
Obama, more than a few talking about his race," Torres said.
TEXAS IN FLUX
Although Texas Hispanics have tended to vote Democratic, in the 2004
presidential election, Bush, the state's former governor, split their
vote with Democrat John Kerry. Now their support may be up for grabs
again — not enough perhaps to swing the state but enough to
force McCain to spend more resources there.
Obama's personal appeal won over San Antonio office manager Naomi
Mathews, 35. The Mexican-American considers herself a Republican but is
leaning toward Obama. She was impressed that he held a town hall across
the street from the coffee shop where she works.
"Maybe it's the whole change thing," said Mathews. "He made an
impression on us. Maybe we can trust this person."
Mathews was one of many Hispanic voters, among dozens interviewed by
The Associated Press, who said they wanted more of a direct pitch from
the candidates.
Angelette Aviles, 32, an active supporter of McCain, believes he will
help the economy and be tough in the international arena. But she was
frustrated by a recent South Florida radio ad highlighting a former
Cuban political prisoner's support for McCain.
"It's like, OK, I think the hardcore voters in Miami are going to vote
for the Republicans no matter what," she said. "The younger generation,
they're more concerned about bread and butter issues. You need to reach
out to us."
Manteiga, a Democrat, said Hispanics want more than Obama's stadium
speeches or McCain's town-hall meetings.
"No one is meeting with the 40 Latin ministries, as they would in the
black community," he said. "Latins want a hug. They want a touch. If
300 or 400 people shake the candidate's hand, that translates
exponentially into votes when they talk to their family and friends."
MATTERS OF RACE
Manteiga said a personal connection is most important for Obama because
he must convince Hispanics who are uncomfortable voting for a black
candidate.
Many Hispanics interviewed by the AP acknowledged tensions on that
front, because of competition over jobs and services or because of
prejudice. Yet many also said these issues would not be the deciding
factor for them, especially in a year when the economy and the war in
Iraq loom large.
"To me, being Hispanic, the government caters to blacks," said Eddie
Martinez, 51, of Las Vegas. "Anything the government is giving away
goes to blacks first."
Even so, Martinez plans to vote for Obama because he believes the
Illinois senator would be the best at bringing jobs to the area.
Manny Genao, a Dominican native, has run the popular Cafe Madrid in
east Orlando for years and proudly displays portraits of local
Republican leaders across his walls.
Genao said people in his neighborhood complained about an uptick in
crime with the influx of "the diverse people" who poured in from New
Orleans following Hurricane Katrina.
In the next breath, he said the Bush administration was too close to
the oil companies and that he views McCain as more of the same. Then he
compared Obama's speeches to those of Martin Luther King Jr.
"I'm still undecided," he said.
Rate
this Article:
Tell
Us What You Think.
|
|
|