Latino politicians gain clout in USAntonio Villaraigosa is the first Hispanic mayor of Los Angeles to be elected since 1872.
By Daniel B. Wood
The Christian Science Monitor
18 May 05
LOS ANGELES -- The election this week of Mexican-American Antonio
Villaraigosa as mayor of Los Angeles is the latest exclamation point
in a story of Hispanic political empowerment that has been unfolding
steadily nationwide for more than three decades.
The high-profile ascent of Mr. Villaraigosa to the top of America's
second-largest city builds on steady gains by Hispanics in municipal,
county, state, and national governments over the past 25 years.
Diplomats taken to Uzbek town, miss massacre scene Insurgents Post
Sniper Training Exercises Online Full Coverage: Afghanistan Political
analysts mark those gains by comparing the political landscapes of
Henry Cisneros, who was elected mayor of San Antonio in1981, and
that of two US Senators, Mel Martinez of Florida and Ken Salazar of
Colorado, elected in 2004.
Between those political bookends, the number of elected Hispanics
has grown 30 percent in the past eight years, from 3,743 in 1996 to
4,853 in 2004.
While Hispanics still don't exercise their rights at the ballot box
in the same percentages as they fill the American population, such
gains, punctuated by the Villaraigosa victory, reflect the nation's
changing cultural and social makeup - and Hispanics' growing ability
to appeal to an ever-widening range of ethnic groups. Many such groups
of newer immigrants - Koreans, Pacific Islanders, Armenians, Iranians,
Russians, Filipinos - embrace the new Hispanic politicians because
they sense fresh openness to their own struggles, observers say.
"The new political face of America is looking South and West for
its emerging identity rather than to Eastern Europe as it did in
the country's first big wave of immigration," says Antonio Gonzales,
president of the William C. Velasquez Institute, a Latino-based think
tank. "Many of the emerging immigrant populations see Hispanics as
accessible and open to them in the way more traditional American
politicians have not been."
The Hispanic gains also reflect America's demographic evolution - and
not just in L.A. While the number of Hispanics has grown nationwide (to
35.3 million - surpassing blacks as the nation's largest minority) the
number of Hispanic voters has doubled (from 5 million to 10 million)
in the past 10 years. That has brought emerging Latino populations -
and politicians - to states outside the Southwest, including Illinois,
and New Jersey which have seen rises of 95 percent and 209 percent
respectively in the number of statewide elected Hispanic officials.
"Part of the story of growing Hispanic political clout is Hispanic's
demonstrated ability to put coalitions together nationally, and
organize voters from Kansas to Colorado to Florida," says Marcelo
Gaete, senior analyst for the National Association of Latino Elected
and Appointed Officials (NALEO). "They are not just thinking in terms
of Texas, California, Arizona, and New Mexico anymore."
Within this context, Villaraigosa's significant victory, winning
59 percent of the votes, is being trumpeted paradoxically as both a
major symbol of Hispanic empowerment - a big-city win softening the
doubt generated by recent losses of Hispanic mayoral candidates in
New York and Chicago - and an indication of normalcy.
At the same time, analysts say the win is meaningful to Hispanics coast
to coast as a political model to emulate. Yet to others, Villaraigosa's
win is unexceptional because of its sheer predictability.
"I call it the hidden integration of the Latino presence," says
Harry Pachon, director of the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute at the
University of Southern California. "In a way, it's just as American
as apple pie. Just as in earlier decades Irish, Italians, and Jewish
politicians made it into the mainstream, Latinos are now experiencing
that. One of the jewels in the crown of America's most populous state
will now be held by a Latino."
Yet for all the euphoria surrounding Villaraigosa in some quarters,
his victory may be as much a repudiation of incumbent James Hahn as
it was an embrace of Villaraigosa. During the campaign, Mr. Hahn was
criticized for alienating African American voters when he fired a
black police chief and for angering white voters in the San Fernando
Valley when he opposed a secession. Ongoing charges of corruption
also trailed Hahn while other observers noted that he simply lacked
the charisma to connect with voters in a city devoted to entertainment.
While Villaraigosa captivated audiences with his style and retelling
of his climb from a high school dropout to successful politician,
the new mayor still must prove he can transfer charisma into managing
one of the largest cities in the nation.
The other side of high-profile victories for Latino politicians,
say analysts, is that the brighter spotlight can also show
deficiencies. Front and center in that challenge is Villaraigosa who
has spent months making promises to diverse groups of voters and must
now turn them into action.
"One thing people have not paid much attention to is the distinction
between an electoral coalition and a governing coalition," says Frank
Gilliam, a political scientist at UCLA. "The question is what happens
now when those politicians who endorsed him, the unions and all the
rest, line up and say, 'What are you going to do for us?' "
A subset of this challenge is one that faces all politicians: Can he
or she govern for all voters, and not just those who helped secure
the victory? In Villaraigosa's case, he will have a national spotlight
on his efforts to balance the expectations of Latinos and non-Latinos.
"The key to continued expansion of Hispanic political power will be how
can they respond to the Hispanic support that got them into office,
[and] also reach beyond it," says Christine Sierra, a professor of
political science at the University of New Mexico. "Villaraigosa will
be in the spotlight in this regard more than most."
By Daniel B. Wood
The Christian Science Monitor
18 May 05
LOS ANGELES -- The election this week of Mexican-American Antonio
Villaraigosa as mayor of Los Angeles is the latest exclamation point
in a story of Hispanic political empowerment that has been unfolding
steadily nationwide for more than three decades.
The high-profile ascent of Mr. Villaraigosa to the top of America's
second-largest city builds on steady gains by Hispanics in municipal,
county, state, and national governments over the past 25 years.
Diplomats taken to Uzbek town, miss massacre scene Insurgents Post
Sniper Training Exercises Online Full Coverage: Afghanistan Political
analysts mark those gains by comparing the political landscapes of
Henry Cisneros, who was elected mayor of San Antonio in1981, and
that of two US Senators, Mel Martinez of Florida and Ken Salazar of
Colorado, elected in 2004.
Between those political bookends, the number of elected Hispanics
has grown 30 percent in the past eight years, from 3,743 in 1996 to
4,853 in 2004.
While Hispanics still don't exercise their rights at the ballot box
in the same percentages as they fill the American population, such
gains, punctuated by the Villaraigosa victory, reflect the nation's
changing cultural and social makeup - and Hispanics' growing ability
to appeal to an ever-widening range of ethnic groups. Many such groups
of newer immigrants - Koreans, Pacific Islanders, Armenians, Iranians,
Russians, Filipinos - embrace the new Hispanic politicians because
they sense fresh openness to their own struggles, observers say.
"The new political face of America is looking South and West for
its emerging identity rather than to Eastern Europe as it did in
the country's first big wave of immigration," says Antonio Gonzales,
president of the William C. Velasquez Institute, a Latino-based think
tank. "Many of the emerging immigrant populations see Hispanics as
accessible and open to them in the way more traditional American
politicians have not been."
The Hispanic gains also reflect America's demographic evolution - and
not just in L.A. While the number of Hispanics has grown nationwide (to
35.3 million - surpassing blacks as the nation's largest minority) the
number of Hispanic voters has doubled (from 5 million to 10 million)
in the past 10 years. That has brought emerging Latino populations -
and politicians - to states outside the Southwest, including Illinois,
and New Jersey which have seen rises of 95 percent and 209 percent
respectively in the number of statewide elected Hispanic officials.
"Part of the story of growing Hispanic political clout is Hispanic's
demonstrated ability to put coalitions together nationally, and
organize voters from Kansas to Colorado to Florida," says Marcelo
Gaete, senior analyst for the National Association of Latino Elected
and Appointed Officials (NALEO). "They are not just thinking in terms
of Texas, California, Arizona, and New Mexico anymore."
Within this context, Villaraigosa's significant victory, winning
59 percent of the votes, is being trumpeted paradoxically as both a
major symbol of Hispanic empowerment - a big-city win softening the
doubt generated by recent losses of Hispanic mayoral candidates in
New York and Chicago - and an indication of normalcy.
At the same time, analysts say the win is meaningful to Hispanics coast
to coast as a political model to emulate. Yet to others, Villaraigosa's
win is unexceptional because of its sheer predictability.
"I call it the hidden integration of the Latino presence," says
Harry Pachon, director of the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute at the
University of Southern California. "In a way, it's just as American
as apple pie. Just as in earlier decades Irish, Italians, and Jewish
politicians made it into the mainstream, Latinos are now experiencing
that. One of the jewels in the crown of America's most populous state
will now be held by a Latino."
Yet for all the euphoria surrounding Villaraigosa in some quarters,
his victory may be as much a repudiation of incumbent James Hahn as
it was an embrace of Villaraigosa. During the campaign, Mr. Hahn was
criticized for alienating African American voters when he fired a
black police chief and for angering white voters in the San Fernando
Valley when he opposed a secession. Ongoing charges of corruption
also trailed Hahn while other observers noted that he simply lacked
the charisma to connect with voters in a city devoted to entertainment.
While Villaraigosa captivated audiences with his style and retelling
of his climb from a high school dropout to successful politician,
the new mayor still must prove he can transfer charisma into managing
one of the largest cities in the nation.
The other side of high-profile victories for Latino politicians,
say analysts, is that the brighter spotlight can also show
deficiencies. Front and center in that challenge is Villaraigosa who
has spent months making promises to diverse groups of voters and must
now turn them into action.
"One thing people have not paid much attention to is the distinction
between an electoral coalition and a governing coalition," says Frank
Gilliam, a political scientist at UCLA. "The question is what happens
now when those politicians who endorsed him, the unions and all the
rest, line up and say, 'What are you going to do for us?' "
A subset of this challenge is one that faces all politicians: Can he
or she govern for all voters, and not just those who helped secure
the victory? In Villaraigosa's case, he will have a national spotlight
on his efforts to balance the expectations of Latinos and non-Latinos.
"The key to continued expansion of Hispanic political power will be how
can they respond to the Hispanic support that got them into office,
[and] also reach beyond it," says Christine Sierra, a professor of
political science at the University of New Mexico. "Villaraigosa will
be in the spotlight in this regard more than most."