Naturalized citizens are poised to reshape California's political landscape

Harold Schiffman hfsclpp at gmail.com
Tue May 12 19:42:15 UTC 2009


http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-newcitizens11-2009may11,0,5503985.story

>>From the Los Angeles Times
Naturalized citizens are poised to reshape California's political landscape
The increase in naturalized Asian and Latino citizens -- 300,000
people took the oath of allegiance in 2008 -- could alter the state's
policy priorities for years to come, analysts say.
By Teresa Watanabe

May 11, 2009

More than 1 million immigrants became U.S. citizens last year, the
largest surge in history, hastening the ethnic transformation of
California's political landscape with more Latinos and Asians now
eligible to vote. Leading the wave, California's 300,000 new citizens
accounted for nearly one-third of the nation's total and represented a
near-doubling over 2006, according to a recent report by the U.S.
Office of Immigration Statistics. Florida recorded the second-largest
group of new citizens, and Texas claimed the fastest growth.

Mexicans, who have traditionally registered low rates of
naturalization, represented the largest group, with nearly one-fourth
of the total. They were followed by Indians, Filipinos, Chinese,
Cubans and Vietnamese. The new citizens are reshaping California's
electorate and are likely to reorder the state's policy priorities,
some political analysts predict. Several polls show that Latinos and
Asians are more supportive than whites of public investments and broad
services, even if they require higher taxes.

Most Latinos, for instance, support all five budget propositions on
the May ballot while most whites oppose them, according to recent
polls by the nonpartisan Public Policy Institute of California.
Although viewed as largely conservative, most Asian Americans
supported a 2004 measure requiring large businesses to provide health
insurance to employees, even as it failed at the ballot box, according
to an analysis by the Asian Pacific American Legal Center in Los
Angeles. Nationally, nonwhite voters overwhelmingly supported Barack
Obama's presidential candidacy, while most whites voted for Sen. John
McCain (R-Ariz.), a recent study by the Pew Research Center showed.
And there were more nonwhite voters last year -- Latino registered
voters increased by 3 million compared with 2004, said Antonio
Gonzalez, president of the Southwest Voting Registration Education
Project in Los Angeles.

The surge in new citizens will accelerate by several years the
California electorate's shift from majority white to nonwhite,
according to Dowell Myers, a USC demographer. Although that shift
won't be completed until 2026, Myers and others said, Latinos, Asians
and African Americans are already joining with progressive whites to
elect ethnically diverse candidates. "As we have more Asian American
and Latino voters, our electorate will begin to look more like the
face of the public at large," said Mark Baldassare of the Public
Policy Institute. "From the standpoint of representative democracy,
few things could be more important than this."

The path to the 1-million mark was paved by an organized collaboration
among community activists, the Spanish-language media and government.
Univision TV network and La Opinion newspaper, in particular, had many
stories about the importance of citizenship and demystified the
application process, said Arturo Vargas, executive director of the
National Assn. of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Educational
Fund in Los Angeles.

"You could not go throughout Los Angeles and not be bombarded with the
message that it's time to become a citizen," said Vargas, whose
organization helped spearhead the national campaign called Ya Es Hora
("It's Time").U.S. immigration officials worked weekends to distribute
information, develop TV scripts and provide an official to conduct an
on-air mock citizenship interview, Vargas said. Jane Arellano,
district director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services'
seven-county area covering Southern California, was the movement's
"unsung hero," he said.

Arellano said she first met with activists in 2006 about their
citizenship campaign plans. As she watched citizenship applications
shoot up in January 2008, Arellano immediately appealed to her
agency's headquarters for extra help. In all, she managed to add more
than 100 extra staff, won authorization for weekend overtime work and
worked with the courts to add and expand citizenship ceremonies. The
high point came in September, when 34,000 new citizens took the oath
of allegiance -- more than a fourfold increase over the previous year,
Arellano said.

Meanwhile, the region's adult and community colleges joined the
effort, expanding English and civics classes to help prepare
immigrants for their citizenship test. The Los Angeles Unified School
District's adult education division nearly doubled the number of
citizenship classes last year over the previous year, officials said.
One of those new Latino voters was Joanuen Llamas, a 26-year-old
Mexico native and Los Angeles homemaker who legally immigrated here in
1998. She was inspired to become a citizen in March 2008 after joining
the massive immigrant rights marches of recent years and took to heart
their slogan, "Today we march, tomorrow we vote."

"It made me think that that's the way to change anything in this
country," said Llamas, who cast her first vote, for Obama, in
November. Those demographic and political trends will continue to
marginalize Republicans unless the party makes major changes in its
tone and policies toward immigrants, said Allan Hoffenblum, a
Republican political consultant in Los Angeles. "The reason the
Republican Party is in such dire straits is its inability to
successfully reach out and change its image among Latinos and Asians,"
he said. "The image is too shrill on immigration. It's an image of an
intolerant cult."

But Gonzalez said Latinos and other immigrants still had far to go,
noting that 8 million of them have not yet claimed citizenship
although they are eligible. "The test is going forward," he said.
Indeed, new citizenship applications have already dropped
significantly. In the Southern California district, for instance,
applications plunged to 58,433 last year from 253,666 the previous
year, U.S. immigration statistics show.

Most experts say that a 69% increase in application fees to $675 was
one reason for the steep decline. The Obama administration is
proposing $206 million in funding for immigration services that could
help reduce the fee by about $50, and activists are hoping for more,
said Rosalind Gold of the National Assn. of Latino Elected and
Appointed Officials Educational Fund. New citizen Alfonso Vergara is
one product of the massive citizenship campaign effort. A Mexico
native and pharmaceutical technician, the 31-year-old said he had
postponed applying for citizenship for years because the process
seemed too time-consuming.

But last year, he said, he was swept up in the marches and the call
for civic activism.

"It was time for me to build a stronger future for my family and
become a more active person in this country," he said.

Ultimately, Vargas said, the citizenship wave will help Latinos and
other new U.S. citizens contribute even more to the country.

"This isn't about helping Latinos for the sake of helping Latinos,"
Vargas said. "This is about helping Latinos succeed for the sake of
America."

-- 
**************************************
N.b.: Listing on the lgpolicy-list is merely intended as a service to
its members
and implies neither approval, confirmation nor agreement by the owner
or sponsor of
the list as to the veracity of a message's contents. Members who
disagree with a
message are encouraged to post a rebuttal. (H. Schiffman, Moderator)
*******************************************



More information about the Lgpolicy-list mailing list