Dear Mr. President,
In less than a month, we will know who will control the U.S. Senate going forward. Will it remain blue or will it turn bloody red?
Sadly, Latino voters, seen as the new bloc of swing voters in the United States and the people most active and adamant in their push for immigration reform, make up only 5 percent or less of eligible voters in eight of the nine U.S. states with toss-up Senate races.
The one exception is Colorado, where Latinos are about 14 percent of eligible voters. But there’s even more bad news. In states where registration statistics are available showing how many Latinos are registered to vote, an even smaller share is Latino. Just 1.9 percent of North Carolina registered voters and 1.7 percent of Georgia registered voters are Latino, according to the Pew Research Center.
What does this mean for Democrats, and what will happen if they lose the Senate? Will you also change your mind about making executive changes on immigration rules?
That’s now the concern of many advocates, who are not sure they can trust you to keep your word after you have failed them so many times in the past five years and in the past few weeks alone.
Whatever you decide to do, it would be wise to act administratively on the immigration front, no matter how hot the button gets. Act immediately as promised after the midterms and do not delay another minute, for it could cost Democrats even more in 2016.
There are now more than 25 million Latinos who are at least 18 years of age and a U.S. citizen in 2014, up from 21.3 million in 2010. These gains largely reflect the growing number of young Latinos who turn 18 each year, approximately 800,000 in 2012, and who are often first-time voters.
In addition, three-quarters of Latino eligible voters live in just seven states—California, Texas, Florida, New York, Arizona, New Jersey and Illinois. Today, Latinos make up 17 percent of the U.S. population, up from 5 percent in 1970, and make up the largest group of immigrants in most states. In some states, though, other Latino groups are the largest: El Salvador is the top country of birth among immigrants in Virginia and Maryland; the Dominican Republic leads in New York and Rhode Island; and Cuba is the top place of birth for immigrants in Florida.
These are numbers that should be paid attention to, as they will determine the future leaders in this country for years to come and whose side these new voters will stand by.
I can only hope that, like Chicago Rep. Luis Gutierrez recently said, you will be “going big, going broad and going quickly after Election Day” as a way of prodding Republicans to action legislatively.
In the words of Marvin Gaye, “Let’s get it on” already.
Respectfully,
Felicia Persaud
The writer is CMO of Hard Beat Communications, which owns the brands News Americas Now, CaribPR Wire and Invest Caribbean Now.
