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Along with independents, who account for one in five registered California voters, Whitman has aggressively courted Hispanics with Spanish-language radio and television ads. That included spots during 15 games of the World Cup, as well as billboards and bus-stop posters. A Public Policy Institute of California poll released this week showed Brown with only a slight lead over Whitman among Hispanic voters, but the survey was taken before the housekeeper controversy began dominating the race. Brown and his supporters also are courting Hispanics, who typically vote Democratic but are being pursued heavily by Whitman. The state's largest public employee union, the Service Employees International Union, is launching an ad campaign coinciding with Saturday's debate. It aims to keep the housekeeper controversy fresh in the minds of Hispanic voters. The $5 million Spanish-language media campaign accuses Whitman of saying one thing in her Spanish-language campaign ads and another when she speaks in English. Whitman also will likely be asked to explain a comment she made last month, when she unflatteringly compared Fresno to Detroit while discussing the poor economy. "Fresno looks like Detroit. It's awful," she told the editorial board of the San Jose Mercury News. California's unemployment rate is 12.4 percent, but it is much higher in many areas of the Central Valley, which has been hard hit by the foreclosure crisis and water shortages that have hurt the agriculture industry.
[Associated
Press;
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