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El Voto Latino
How Will Hispanic Catholics Vote in 2008?
BY ANGELIQUE RUHI-LOPEZ Register Correspondent
October 26-November 1, 2008 Issue |
Posted 10/21/08 at 8:03 AM
PHOENIX — Tommy Espinoza feels all
alone.
It’s not because he’s Catholic —
most Hispanics are. It’s not because he’s a Democrat — Hispanics tend to be
that, too.
It’s because he plans to vote for
John McCain.
Espinoza was greeted with some jeers
when he took the stage at the Republican National Convention and introduced
himself as a “Catholic, Hispanic and a Democrat.”
But he made convention-goers cheer
when he announced that he was “proud to call John McCain my friend.”
“I’ve worked with Senator McCain for
the last 25 years,” he said at the convention in early September. “And what
I’ve seen in the senator is a person with a lot of passion when it comes to
helping Latinos who need a strong voice in the public arena.”
Espinoza, president and CEO of Raza
Development Fund, a community development organization headquartered in Phoenix
that provides loans and technical assistance to entities that serve low-income
Latino families, said he supports McCain because he has seen firsthand in
Arizona the senator’s support of Hispanic issues, such as bilingual education
and immigration, and because of the senator’s pro-life voting record.
Espinoza seems to be in the
minority, however. According to a nationwide survey of 2,015 Latinos conducted
by the Pew Hispanic Center from June 9 to July 13, registered Hispanic voters
support Obama for president over McCain 66% to 23%. The poll also shows that
Obama has a 50-percentage-point lead over McCain among Catholic Latinos.
Another survey, released Oct. 16 by
the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, the Jesse Miranda
Center, Faith in Public Life, America’s Voice Education Fund and Gastón
Espinosa, associate professor of religious studies at Claremont McKenna College
and Claremont Graduate University, found that Hispanic Protestant support for
the Republican ticket has been cut nearly in half since the 2004 election. The
survey, which did not include Catholic voters, found that abortion is extremely
or very important as a voting issue to nearly 75% of those surveyed, while
immigration is extremely or very important to 71%.
George Marlin, author of The
American Catholic Voter, quoted various polling data in the online
publication The Catholic Thing to make the following
points about Hispanics. Most of them:
•
Oppose abortion
•
Attend church
•
Believe that couples should marry if they intend to live together
•
Say that unwed parents should be legally wed
•
Hold that government should promote “personal responsibility” instead of
“bureaucratic paternalism.”
•
View welfare as a temporary safety net, not a permanent way of life.
“These data explain why the most
significant Bush gains in the 2004 presidential election were in the Hispanic
communities,” Marlin writes.
He also made the case that the
Hispanic vote is trending more Republican.
•
In 1996, 21% of Hispanics voted for Bob Dole over Bill Clinton
n
In 2000 34% voted for George W. Bush over Al Gore
•
In 2004, 41% voted to re-elect the President against John Kerry.
Marlin quotes Dick Morris’
conclusion: “More Hispanics voted Republican for a variety of factors,
including Bush’s efforts to cultivate them, his proposals to legalize guest
workers, and his conservative position on social values, which was a special
importance to religious Catholic Hispanics.”
Leslie Sanchez, president of the
Impacto Group, a Republican communications research firm, agreed: “There is no
doubt Hispanics share many of the values of the Republican Party.”
Bishops’ Clarification
In the 2008 election, Latino
registered voters rank education, the cost of living, jobs and health care as
the most important issues, with crime, the war in Iraq and even immigration
lagging behind. On each of these seven issues, Obama is strongly favored over
McCain — by ratios ranging from about 3-to-1 on education, jobs, health care,
the cost of living and immigration, to about 2-to-1 on Iraq and crime. Life
issues, though, did not feature prominently on the list, despite the fact that
most Hispanics are Catholic and would consider themselves pro-life.
But Obama’s “young face” and message
of change is effectively winning over many Hispanic Catholics.
“Barack emphasizes change and is
making a pretty convincing argument that he can bring about that change,” said
Jazmin Jiménez, an ethics and social justice teacher at Verbum Dei High School
in Los Angeles, part of the Jesuit-run Cristo Rey Network of schools. “From
watching him speak and from reading articles that he’s written, he does a
really good job of talking about how faith and politics don’t have to oppose
one another; one can inform the other in an appropriate way. He himself isn’t
Catholic, but a lot of what he represents is in line with Catholic social
teaching, though he wouldn’t call it that,” she said.
Jiménez said that for her, life
issues are important in this campaign, but so are the economy, health care and
the war in Iraq.
“I think that Catholics who are
voting on single issues need to look at the recent documents that have come out
from the conference of Catholic bishops,” she said. “The bishops are
challenging American Catholics to vote for a common good, not just on single
issues. If we vote on a single life issue, then we’re ignoring many other life
issues that are just as important, at least for me.”
But two bishops in Texas, which has
a significant Mexican-American population, reaffirmed that “Forming Consciences
for Faithful Citizenship,” issued by the U.S. bishops’ conference last year,
states that to vote for a candidate who supports an intrinsic evil, such as
abortion, when there is a morally acceptable alternative, would be to cooperate
in the evil.
“The only moral possibilities for a
Catholic to be able to vote in good conscience for a candidate who supports
this intrinsic evil are the following,” said an Oct. 8 letter from Dallas
Bishop Kevin Farrell and Fort Worth Bishop Kevin Vann: “If both candidates
running for office support abortion or ‘abortion rights,’ a Catholic would be
forced to look at the other important issues and through their vote try to
limit the evil done, or, if another intrinsic evil outweighs the evil of
abortion.”
The bishops said that right now
there are no “‘truly grave moral’ or ‘proportionate’ reasons, singularly or
combined, that could outweigh the millions of innocent human lives that are
directly killed by legal abortion each year.”
The Economy
Miami-based Ariel Fernández, a
member of the Catholics for McCain National Steering Committee, thinks that
pro-life issues are always important to Hispanic voters.
“Hispanic Catholics especially have
always made the pro-life issue a priority when choosing our next leaders,” he
said. “Let’s face it; if we boil it down, if there is no life, nothing else
will make sense. The first thing that has to exist is life; if we don’t
guarantee someone that constitutional right, then we have a problem.”
Fernandez admits, though, that the
economy is on everyone’s minds in this election.
For one undecided Hispanic Catholic
voter, the choice is not so easy.
“I am a swing voter … but I like to
be holistic in my approach to life issues,” said Erika Vega, who was very
involved in the pro-life club at Loyola Marymount University, where she
studied. “Life issues, including abortion, capital punishment and war, and all
the other issues are definitely important to me, but I don’t really know what
it’s going to take to convince me either way.
“McCain, for example,” she said, “is
not a very good pro-lifer when compared to other Republicans. Crisis-pregnancy
centers and giving women the emotional support and resources needed to make the
decisions are more important to me than the legal bickering, and Democrats tend
to provide more funding for these types of social programs. To me, these are
still things that need to be addressed, whether Roe v.
Wade is ever overturned or not.”
In the end, Vega said, “I am still
undecided. I still need to figure it out.”
Astrid Bennett Gutierrez, on the
other hand, believes no issue should come above the life issue, and her
experiences on the front lines of the abortion battle confirm her belief.
“There are other issues that are
important, but comparing something like the school system or economy … If you
don’t have the right to life, which is the first primordial right, how does
anything else matter?” said Bennett Gutierrez, coordinator of Hispanics for
Life and Human Rights and director of the Los Angeles Crisis Pregnancy Center.
“Anyone who understands the magnitude and has seen what abortion is cannot see
the election in the same way.
“I used to vote according to what
the media told me,” she said. “It changed for me when I realized what each
party truly represented.”
The purpose of Hispanics for Life
and Human Rights is to educate the Hispanic community on life issues and
particularly on what they feel is “the hate crime they have been subjected to
by the abortion industry and promoters of abortion,” Bennett Gutierrez
explained.
“There are nine abortion facilities
within a one-mile radius of our [crisis-pregnancy] clinic here in L.A. that are aggressively handing out flyers
to women,” Bennett Gutierrez said. “It’s really aggressive campaigning. …
Hispanics are traditional, conservative; they care about family, and they care
about life. For us to be able to move Hispanics, they need to understand the
magnitude [of abortion], and we must teach people the truth. The Hispanic
Catholic community is a sleeping giant, and it is time for that giant to
awaken.”
Angelique
Ruhi-Lopez
writes
from Miami.
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