- By Roberto Lovato
- New America Media,
- Jan 22, 2008
-
- The most interesting development out of the Nevada caucus
votes had little to do with Hillary Clinton winning a large
percentage of the Latino vote – that was predictable. More
fascinating was the sudden and exponential surge in the number of
experts in Latino politics.
It was tragicomic to watch non-Spanish speaking pundits explain
the ‘reality’ of the Nevada vote while standing in the artificial
light of the casinos during one of the first caucus meetings held
entirely in Spanish. Reporters had to wait for translators to tell
them what campaign workers were saying before they could report it
to us. Understanding the electoral needs of casino, hotel,
restaurant and other workers who labor in a new economy – and
require new hours for voting – proved very difficult for many in
the media to understand.
It was no less difficult having to watch the white, and some
African American, political commentators on MSNBC, CNN and other
networks tell us that the Latino vote for Clinton reflected
“Black-Latino tensions.” The New York Times newspaper had earlier
echoed these observations in a
story that caused frustration in the Latino blogosphere. In a
recent issue of The New Yorker, a publication that has no
Latino editorial staff and publishes very few stories a year about
the country's 46 million Latinos, the magazine showed off its
newfound expertise in a
story which detailed how Latinos are Clinton's electoral
"firewall," thanks to the "lingering tensions between the Hispanic
and black communities." It’s hard to know how they know this when
only one serious polling organization in the country conducts
polls in a language other than English.
Yet everybody, it seems, has something to say about Latino
politics. Everybody that is, except Latinos.
The awkwardness and simplicity seen and heard in the coverage of
the Latino electorate illustrates how ill-equipped the news
organizations, the political parties and the society as a whole
are to understand and deal with the historic political shift
previewed in Nevada: the death of the black-white electorate.
Simplistic talk about the Latino vote provides another example of
how we live when the ‘experts’ and their organizations are
increasingly out of touch with the dynamism and complexity of the
electorate and the general populace.
As a result, the growth of the very diverse Latino electorate will
likely force the revelation of more inconvenient truths. Principle
among them is the media’s conclusion that anti-black racism among
Latinos explains why they voted Clinton and not Obama in Nevada.
Story after story tries to fit the Latino vote into the
procrustean bed of old-school, black v. white politics.
Typical of these conclusions are statements by the liberal New
Republic's
John Judis. He explained Latino support for Clinton this way:
"Latino immigrants hold negative stereotypical views of blacks and
feel that they have more in common with whites than with blacks."
Judis backed his claims with a modicum of academic seriousness as
he quoted "experts" like Duke University political scientist Paula
D. McClain. McClain told me in an interview that she neither
speaks Spanish nor watches the primary source of Latino news and
political information, saying: "I don't watch Univision." Quoting
her makes little practical sense.
It only makes sense when we consider how ever-expanding Latino
power in Nevada and across the country is pushing up against
people's fraying sense of nationhood and citizenship. Latino
citizens and voters, not undocumented immigrants, are the targets
of many liberals. These liberals long for the simpler days of a
black-white electorate, a less-globalized country. Like Clinton,
Obama and all Republican candidates, they support the political
and racial equivalents of the anti-immigrant, anti-Latino border
wall.
So instead of considering that Latinos reflect the new
complexities of our political age, we should, experts tell us,
simply swallow the black-white political logic of the previous
era, like the half-moon cookies our grandmothers made. Ignore
whatever you think of the Clintons - they have more than 15 years
of relationships, name-recognition and history in the Latino
electorate. Outside of Chicago, Obama has less than two years.
Never mind that Latinos may still be wondering about why Obama did
not, until recently, secure the support of most black voters.
Never mind about the political amnesia about how the country's
last black candidate of national stature – Jesse Jackson- defied
the prevailing racial logic during the Presidential primaries of
1988, when his Rainbow Coalition secured almost 50 percent of the
Latino vote in Latino-heavy New Mexico counties like Santa Fe and
San Miguel and 36 percent of the Latino vote in the largest Latino
state in the country: California.
The Latino experience of the right-of-center Clintons and the
left-of-center Jackson, who the Illinois senator did not ask to
campaign for him, raises questions about Mr. Obama's political
operation and his political agenda. Time will tell us what was
behind the Latino support for Clinton in Nevada. And who knows,
maybe the experts telling us about Obama, Clinton and other
candidates' fortunes in upcoming primaries will do so without the
black and white lens that has proven obsolete in the face of a new
country.
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__________________________________________________________________
- Roberto Lovato, a frequent HispanicVista.com and Nation
contributor, is a New York-based writer with New America Media.
Write to him at:
robvato@gmail.com
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