Barack
Obama’s speech on Tuesday before the League of
United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) was very
important for several reasons. First, it signals
that Obama has rebounded from his primary
perception deficit with Latino voters and has
built a two-to-one advantage over John McCain.
Second, and this is more important, this could
signal the beginning of a working partnership
between African-Americans and Hispanics in the
adoption and implementation of public policy
initiatives, but, as we all know, you have to
win before you can govern.
Giving a
good speech is not the wisest way to win an
election, however. Obama and McCain should
remember that it is not the aggregate votes of
the Hispanic community that will win the White
House in November; rather, it is where these
voters live that is the most important
statistic. Over the last 30 years people of
Hispanic heritage have been moving into states
that are vitally important if you want to reach
270 in the Electoral College.
Most of
us already know that there are large segments of
the Hispanic community located in New York,
Florida and California. The main question is can
Obama maintain a thirty percent gap of Hispanic
voters in Republican states such as Texas and
Arizona on Election Day? If he can, then these
swing voters can turn a close election into a
rout not seen since Ronald Reagan wiped the
floor with Walter Mondale in 1984.
We
haven’t even talked about the “purple states”
yet. In Colorado, there are 404,000 eligible
Hispanic voters according to the Pew Hispanic
Center. In 2004, President Bush narrowly
defeated John Kerry by less than 100,000 votes.
In 2008, Hispanics will make up over twelve
percent of the eligible voting population of the
state of Colorado. If Obama can maintain his
momentum among the Hispanic community,
especially in swing states, Colorado might move
from Red to Blue. Perhaps that’s why the
Democratic National Convention is going to be
held in Denver for the first time since
1908…just another thing that makes you go hmmm.
Crossposted at www.examiner.com |