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Clinton outpolls Obama
because of a cultural affinity for dynasties, family loyalty.
- By Roosevelt Montás
- Los Angeles Times/Opinion
March 7, 2008
My mother has always been a
Clinton enthusiast, and since she passed her citizenship
examination, in Spanish, two years ago, she has been eager to
vote for the most powerful elected office in the world. Since
Iowa, I've been asking her whether Barack Obama has won her over
yet. The answer continues to be no, but her passion for Hillary
Rodham Clinton seems to be waning. Beneath her hesitation, I
sense a struggle between the appeal of Obama and a loyalty to
Clinton that I am only beginning to understand.
In the Texas primary, the Latino vote again proved to be
Clinton's surest levy against the rising tide of support for
Obama. This trend was clear in Nevada, where, in defiance of the
Culinary Workers Union's endorsement of her opponent, Latinos
handed Clinton seven out of nine caucuses on the Las Vegas
Strip. Nevada Latinos overall favored her by a whopping 38
points. The Super Tuesday contests and the Texas primary March 4
sent the same message: The Obama magic is failing to charm
Latinos.
- A common explanation for Clinton's lead
among Latinos has been the idea of a rivalry between Latinos
and blacks. The theory goes that the two minorities are locked
in competition for, on the one hand, a dwindling pool of jobs
at the bottom of the economic scale and, on the other, the
spoils of an increasingly threatened affirmative-action
system. But this explanation fails to resonate with my
experience. It imposes on Latinos an outdated paradigm of
American race relations.
The fact is that, among my family and friends, support for
Clinton does not reflect animosity toward a black candidate;
like almost all Americans, Latinos are inspired by the
breakthrough meaning of an Obama presidential candidacy. Even
in California, where Clinton carried Latino Democrats by a 2-1
margin, 55% of Latinos nonetheless expressed a favorable
opinion of Obama.
I suspect that two little-noted factors, both of them cultural
rather than economic or ideological, account for the strength
of Latino loyalty to Clinton: a residual comfort with
political dynasties inherited from Latin American history, and
the respect she commands for her family loyalty in the face of
Bill Clinton's marital failings. Both factors reflect
traditional family values, a cultural trait among Latinos that
political strategists like Karl Rove have exploited in the
past.
On a recent trip to the Dominican Republic, where I'm from, I
was assured by a prominent political analyst that Clinton
would win the U.S. presidency because Americans understand
that she and her husband can restore America's economic
vitality. The "Billary" candidacy, which troubles some voters,
is the stuff of Latin American politics. Last year, Cristina
Fernandez de Kirchner overwhelmingly won her bid to succeed
her husband as president of Argentina. In the recent transfer
of power in Cuba, the least remarkable thing is that Fidel's
successor is his brother. Latin American political rule has
long been understood as a family affair. Think of the Perons
in Argentina, the Somozas in Nicaragua, the Pastranas in
Colombia or the Institutional Revolutionary Party dynasty that
ruled Mexico until recently.
A second powerful force drawing Latinos to Clinton is her
"family values." I don't mean her views on abortion or
homosexual unions, but how she has managed a series of very
personal and very public domestic problems. In her most
heartfelt response during the Texas debate Feb. 21, she
alluded to this public/private story: "I think everybody here
knows I've lived through some crises and some challenging
moments in my life," she said, before moving on to the
problems of other American families. The next two minutes
revealed a warm and vulnerable Hillary Clinton. By the time
she was done, the audience was on its feet. Nor was the point
lost on the viewers of Univision, who heard it in Spanish: for
Hillary Clinton, primero la familia.
These two cultural factors -- above, or perhaps below,
politics -- also help explain the generational rift among
Latino voters. Younger and more educated voters have been
defecting to Obama, while older ones find themselves
emotionally connected to what Clinton represents. In Texas,
Clinton won Latinos by a 2-1 margin, but close to half of
those aged 18 to 29 voted for Obama. It's another way in
which, quite apart from their policies or positions, Clinton
represents tradition, and Obama, change.
Like my mother, many Latinos are being pulled in two
directions, and a lot -- maybe even the presidency -- may
depend on which way they go.
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Roosevelt Montás is director of the core curriculum at
Columbia University and recipient of the Dominican Republic's
2008 National Youth Prize.
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http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-montas7mar07,0,1632730.story?track=ntothtml
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