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Developing a Latino electorate

LATINOS COULD BECOME A SIGNIFICANT POLITICAL FORCE AS IMMIGRANTS BECOME CITIZENS AND VOTE

Review essay by Rob Paral

Counting on the Latino Vote: Latinos as a New Electorate

by Louis DeSipio, University of Virginia Press, 1996.

After the 1993 elections, 20 municipal officials took office in Cicero, Melrose Park and Summit. These winning candidates were Republican and Democrat, male and female, veterans and novices. But while Latinos make up more than 30 percent of the population in each of these Chicago suburbs, only one Latino was elected.

Indeed, there are few Latino elected officials in municipal government in the Chicago suburbs, though the Latino population there is booming. During the 1980s, the number of Latinos in the suburbs grew 11 times faster than the non-Latino population in that region. Latinos increased their ranks by almost 80 percent, while the number of non- Latinos grew by just 7 percent. Yet only a half-dozen or so Latino elected officials can be found representing the 280, 000 suburban Latinos.

Latinos are making somewhat better political inroads in Chicago: More than one in five Chicagoans is a Latino and seven Latino aldermen sit on the 50- member Chicago City Council.

Explaining the shortage of Latino elected officials and the limited impact of the Latino vote may seem simple: As a group, Latinos vote at rates dramatically lower than whites or blacks. Only

about 27 percent of Latino adults are registered voters in Illinois, compared to 66 percent of all whites and 65 percent of blacks.

But the low rate of Latino electoral participation results from circumstances more complicated than a simple failure of Latinos to show up at the voting booth. Fully 40 percent of Latino adults in Illinois are not U.S. citizens, compared to about 2 percent of whites and 2 percent of blacks.

The fact that many Latinos are immigrants who have not yet become citizens is routinely lost on political observers. Low Latino voting is often (and ridiculously) ascribed to cultural predispositions. In reality, Latino voting turnout largely reflects a structural impediment: the process of becoming a U.S. citizen.

Louis DeSipio, author of Counting on the Latino Vote: Latinos as a New Electorate (published by the University of Virginia Press, 1996), maintains that Latinos could become a significant force in American politics if they are given the proper incentive to become citizens and register to vote. DeSipio, an assistant professor of political science at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, argues that both Democrats and Republicans should take an interest in harnessing this potentially huge block of voters, who could become the fifth new electorate in this century, following women, European ethnics, African Americans and 18-to 20-year-olds.

DeSipio draws upon two detailed national surveys of the Latino population to make his case — the National Latino Immigrant Survey and the National Latino Political Survey, both funded by the Ford Foundation and both of which DeSipio helped implement. (For the record, DeSipio and I are friends; we both worked in the Washington, D.C., office of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials.)

He delineates Latino nonvoters into three groups: registered citizens who don't vote, nonregistered citizens and, the largest group, noncitizen immigrants. Drawing on the survey data, DeSipio points out that the first two groups do not offer a large pool of potential new voters, as their low socioeconomic status is a powerful, negative influence on their likelihood of voting.

The third group — the noncitizens

34 ¦ October 1996 Illinois Issues


— also have low socioeconomic status. But, DeSipio writes, many of them have key characteristics predisposing them to vote once they become citizens. For example, some 34 percent are active in community organizations and 45 percent were politically active in their home countries.

DeSipio argues that a massive, national citizenship campaign targeting these noncitizens would foster a sense of Latino unity and purpose, and translate into a serious political movement. The momentum created by hundreds of thousands of immigrants joining the polity would spur all Latinos toward greater political participation, culminating in a Latino electorate taking its place among the major new electorates of this century. In Illinois, naturalization could potentially create 275, 000 new Latino voters.

DeSipio's book breaks new ground in zeroing in on the noncitizens as potential voters. His analysis goes far in explaining political change in the half-dozen states — including Illinois — that are receiving large numbers of Latino immigrants.

The two major political parties in America are capable of mobilizing Latino noncitizens to become citizens. DeSipio gives examples of the Democratic Party winning the partisan loyalty of earlier waves of immigrants by assisting them with the naturalization process. Unfortunately, neither party today makes a comparable attempt to gain the allegiance of new immigrant voters.

President Bill Clinton has made an effort to promote U.S. citizenship to immigrants through a Citizenship USA campaign managed by the Immigration and Naturalization Service. Recently, the Clinton Administration has been criticized for pushing the program too fast in an effort to create Democratic voters.

Both Republicans and Democrats have a stake in promoting Latino citizenship drives. The survey data DeSipio analyzes find both right- and left-leaning tendencies among Latino noncitizens. Many Mexican noncitizens, for example, oppose abortion and support capital punishment. At the same time, they support an activist governmental role in job creation.

These Latino noncitizens must cross the hurdle of naturalization before they can register to vote. Naturalization is the voluntary process by which legal immigrants become U.S. citizens. In general, applicants for naturalization must have resided in the United States for five years, have good moral character and prove to the INS that they speak English well and understand how the U.S. government works. It costs applicants $95 to apply for citizenship.

Latinos are less likely than other immigrant groups to naturalize. While about 44 percent of Polish and 61 percent of Filipino immigrants in Illinois have become citizens, only 24 percent of Mexican immigrants and 25 percent of Guatemalan immigrants (the second largest Latino immigrant group) have completed the citizenship process. Historically, several factors have limited the number of Latinos becoming U.S. citizens. Low levels of formal education prevent many Mexican immigrants from passing the INS test in English and civics. Only one of four Mexican noncitizens in this state has a high school degree. Proximity of Mexico to the United States is another factor: Both Mexican and Canadian immigrants are among the least likely of all immigrants to naturalize. Also, there have been few real incentives for immigrants to naturalize.

About 50, 000 legal immigrants come to Illinois each year. This immigration combined with low naturalization rates has caused the noncitizen population to steadily grow in Illinois. Approximately 550, 000 noncitizens of all ages live in Illinois, with about 40 percent of them coming from Latin America.

The Latino noncitizens are characterized by relatively low levels of education, as noted. They have poverty rates higher than the native population, lower incomes, and are more likely to work in the service and manufacturing industries.

Not surprising, given their impetus to emigrate in search of work, noncitizens are more likely to be in the labor

For More Information

LATINO VOICES: MEXICAN, PUERTO RICAN AND

CUBAN PERSPECTIVES ON AMERICAN POLITICS, by

Rodolfo 0. de la Garza, Louis DeSipio, F. Chris Garcia, John Garcia and Angelo Falcon (Westview Press, Boulder, Colo., 1992). Presents and analyzes the findings of the National Latino Political Survey.

NEW AMERICANS BY CHOICE: POLITICAL PERSPEC- TIVES OF LATINO IMMIGRANTS, by Harry Pachon and Louis DeSipio (Westview Press, Boulder, Colo., 1994). Presents and analyzes the findings of the National Latino Immigrant Survey.

1996 NATIONAL DIRECTORY OF LATINO ELECTED OFFICIALS, published by the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Education Fund (NALEO Educational Fund, Los Angeles, 1996). The standard reference guide to the number, location and type of Latino elected officials nation- wide.

1996 LATINO ELECTION HANDBOOK, published by the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Education Fund (NALEO Edu- cational Fund, Los Angeles, 1996). Provides "Races to Watch" and Latino voting statistics for states, including Illinois.

Illinois Issues October 1996 ¦ 35


force than the native-born Illinoisan. About 78 percent of Mexican nonciti- zens are in the labor force (meaning they are employed or actively seeking employment) compared to only 66 percent of the general population.

The noncitizen Latino population, then, grows apace in Illinois, integrated into the economy but not the polity.

The gap between Latino population size and political influence becomes more sharply obvious with each election cycle. If Latino noncitizen adults became citizens and voted in the three suburbs of Cicero, Melrose Park and Summit described earlier, they would increase voter turnout by more than 40 percent in each locale.

Latinos

clearly have the potential to exercise substantial influence in numerous municipal races. This influence could also begin to sway the outcome of General Assembly races in the suburbs.

For example, more than 13, 000 nonciti- zens — the majority of them Latino — reside in the suburban state Senate districts of Republicans James "Pate" Philip, Steve Rauschenberger and Marty Butler.

In statewide elections. Latino influence continues to be small. The margin of victory separating two candidates now must be extremely narrow — about 2 percentage points — for Latinos to constitute a "swing vote." (A group forms a swing vote if it is large enough to affect election results when voting as a block.) In the 1990 gubernatorial election, each candidate needed every Latino vote he could garner: Gov. Jim Edgar carried the election with less than 51 percent of votes cast.

ii9610341.jpg

In the 1994 gubernatorial race, meanwhile, Edgar carried 64 percent of the vote, effectively rendering the 125, 000 Latino votes immaterial. Every Latino voter could have voted Demo- cratic and the election result would have remained the same.

Earlier, I noted that historically there have been few concrete reasons for legal immigrants to become citizens. But when President Bill Clinton signed the massive welfare reform bill on August 22, he and the bill's Republican sponsors made most legal immigrants ineligible for a host of governmental programs. As one example, only U.S. citizens will now be eligible for food stamps in time of need. With a stroke of his pen, Clinton may have created the most powerful incentive yet for immigrants to file their citizenship papers. The welfare bill's provisions have already spurred a surge in citizenship applications.

Anti-immigrant rhetoric employed by both parties (though most notably by prominent Republicans such as Pat Buchanan) also has energized immigrants to vote as a way to protest this scapegoating. House Republicans in Washington recently passed a bill making English the official language of the United States. Most immigrants see this measure as xenophobic, and Latino immigrants' applications for U.S. citizenship are destined to increase in this climate. The challenge to both political parties is to harness this nascent interest, promote it further and reap the partisan allegiance of a growing block of new, politically active Latino U.S. citizens.

Rob Paral is senior research associate at the Latino Institute in Chicago. He recently completed an extensive study of immigrants' use of welfare in Illinois.

36 ¦ October 1996 Illinois Issues


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