<http://www.nypost.com/> clip_image001Updated: Sun., May. 15, 2011, 4:48 AM 
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Over the border

By KYLE SMITH

Last Updated: 4:48 AM, May 15, 2011

Posted: 12:42 AM, May 15, 2011

The Latino vote is the new weather — everyone talks about it, but no one does 
anything about it. 

No one doubts the growing political importance of Latinos: The group now 
comprises about 9% of eligible voters and drives 51% of America’s population 
growth.

The story of the latest census, and the resulting reapportionment of 
congressional seats and electoral votes from states like Pennsylvania, Ohio and 
Michigan to states like Texas and Florida, has many chapters — the slow demise 
of Rust Belt manufacturing, job growth in right-to-work states, gaps in tax and 
regulatory burdens.

One little-remarked-on effect will be an uptick in Latino voting power. The 
percentage of eligible voters who are Latino is 15% in the eight states that 
are gaining seats, only 5% in the 10 states that are losing seats, according to 
the Pew Hispanic Center.

But Latinos are a relatively young group. So 15 million Latino citizens haven’t 
cast their first ballot yet. Maybe they’re up for grabs.

President Obama captured 67% of the Latino vote in 2008, but in April one 
survey said only 41% were definitely going to vote for him in 2012. As recently 
as 2004, George W. Bush carried 44% of the Latino vote.

Now “Latino support for Obama is tepid heading into 2012,” said the news site 
Latino Decisions.

“Obama has a credibility problem right now with Latinos,” Univision anchor 
Jorge Ramos, the Walter Cronkite of Latino America, told Politico last summer.

Latinos believe Obama should use his executive authority to slow down 
deportations of illegal immigrants, a radical gambit that the president shows 
no inclination to try.

So Obama turned up in El Paso, Texas, on Tuesday to make his pitch to Latinos. 
The pitch was a vague puffball.

The El Paso message? A path to citizenship for illegals is essential. (But the 
president isn’t proposing any legislation along those lines.) He’s totally 
behind the DREAM act (which he didn’t even try to pass until the lame-duck 
session of Congress and which is all but dead). He believes immigrants have 
made this country great — but he’s also deporting more illegals than George W. 
Bush did. And anyway, according to the president, the Republicans want the 
southern border protected by an alligator-filled moat.

This was a pep talk to convince Latinos that Obama is on their side, and 
Republicans aren’t. Latinos already largely believe that. Recent polls show bad 
news for the GOP among Latinos except in Florida, where the cohort is 
especially conservative. Last fall Arizona’s Republican Gov. Jan Brewer was 
re-elected with only 28% of the Latino vote. Brian Sandoval, the new Republican 
governor of Nevada, didn’t do much better at 33% — and he is himself a Latino. 
Gov. Rick Perry of Texas did better with 38% of the Latino vote as he was 
re-elected last fall. Says political consultant Andre Pineda, “the fact is that 
Republicans went on the anti-immigrant rampage and they still haven’t recovered 
and still haven’t learned the lesson.”

But is Obama’s El Paso speech all that Latino voters desire — some warm wishes 
and maybe a cookie at bedtime?

Obama talked immigration. Latinos are talking about foreclosure. An April 
survey by impreMedia/Latino Decisions found that among Latinos, 43% of renters 
and 37% of homeowners were worried about getting kicked out of their homes. The 
same poll found that 40% of respondents feel Washington takes their needs into 
account “not too much” or “not at all.” Pineda said that in a focus group of 40 
Latino likely voters, only one brought up immigration reform as a top issue.

Obama talked to Eva Longoria. Latinos want him to talk employment. More than a 
third of Latinos are worried about losing their jobs. “It’s nice to get the 
respect from the president, that he is aware of the way Republicans are trying 
to describe Latinos as less than Americans,” Pineda says. “But what Latino 
voters want right now above all else is jobs.” And Latinos are 
disproportionately affected by high gas prices. They spend a full percentage 
point of their income more than the average on fueling their cars.

Even some seemingly strong areas for Obama look shaky. Polls say Latinos are 
very concerned about losing their health care, yet they aren’t sold on the idea 
that they’re protected by the Obama health care law. Only 49% of them support 
it, according to a February poll.

So what do Latino voters want? When immigration reform isn’t on the table — and 
right now it’s not even in the room — they want job growth. They want housing 
security. They want lower gas prices. They want, in other words, the same 
things everybody else wants. Maybe the next election isn’t really going to be 
about border-patrol alligators. Maybe it’s the economy, estupido.

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