[Nor do the nation's regionally and ethnically diverse Latinos attach themselves to just one party on the issues.] The Hispanic vote is very hard to pigeonhole, ... On certain issues, they're very conservative. On other issues, just the opposite - they're very liberal. |
A lot of Latinos are first-generation new citizens, or second-generation children of immigrants, who don't have those deep roots of partisan attachment. |
an unprecedented outreach into the Mexican immigrant community. |
For every 100 Latinos you see walking down the street today, 34 of those 100 are under the age of 18, so they're not qualified to vote. That leaves 66. Of those 66, in certain states, 33 aren't U.S. citizens yet, so that leaves 33 Latinos. Of those 33, something like 16 don't register to vote. That leaves 17. Of the 17 Latinos who are left, about 11 to 12 actually vote. |
For many years, these undocumented immigrants, as well as individuals who sympathize with the plight of this community, have been very quiet and passive. When you have 100,000 people out in the street, that gives reality to potential political power. |
He voted his conscience, even when people made fun of him, |
He was a quiet ground-breaker, ... Many of his accomplishments go unrecognized because he did things in a quiet way. |
I think it's a watershed moment. |
It makes sense for them to do this. It's a demographic imperative that's happening in the nation. It's showing that the Hispanic population is developing into a national presence. If it was still regionalised I don't know if they'd go through the trouble. |
It might give some companies pause about the potential power that exists there. It does show you a market out there. |
Legal or illegal, advertisers still think they have to buy toothpaste in the morning, |
Look at the Chicago area. Cook County, Illinois, now has more Latinos than Arizona, New Mexico or Colorado. |
Los Angeles is Los Angeles, and it's very easy for someone to come here not knowing English and be able to get a toehold on American society. |
Oh my goodness, we've heard such horribly accented Spanish in the past six months, I can't tell you. You kind of wince and you say, 'OK, let's get through the Spanish,' because you know the candidate is really trying to say something to Latinos. |
One out of every nine Americans is now Latino. In certain states, Latinos, in the next 20 years, will outnumber the traditional white non-Hispanic population. |