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		Ready for a fight: Voter enthusiasm 
		surges among U.S. Hispanics 
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		 [November 05, 2018] 
		By Chris Kahn and Daniel Trotta 
 (Reuters) - Hispanics are more interested 
		in voting this year than in the last U.S. congressional midterm 
		elections in 2014 and their enthusiasm outpaces that of all U.S. adults, 
		according to a Reuters/Ipsos national tracking poll released on Sunday.
 
 The poll also found likely Hispanic voters nearly twice as inclined to 
		support Democrats for the House of Representatives as Republicans in 
		Tuesday's elections.
 
 Voter registration groups are using Republican President Donald Trump's 
		nationalist, anti-immigrant rhetoric as an opportunity to drive up 
		Latino enthusiasm. In an illustration of their passion, one group that 
		is part of an alliance that has reached out to more than 1 million 
		potential voters in Arizona took its name from the Spanish word for 
		"fight."
 
 Most opinion polls and political handicappers expect Democrats to win 
		the 23 seats they need to assume control of the House. Republicans are 
		favored to keep control of the Senate.
 
 Latinos could play a crucial role in several races, from tight Senate 
		battles in Arizona and Texas to Florida's close Senate and governor's 
		races. In California, the flourishing Latino population has helped put 
		in play some Republican-controlled House districts Democrats hope to 
		flip.
 
 The Reuters/Ipsos poll, taken Sept. 1 to Oct. 29, found that 36 percent 
		of Hispanic voters said they were "certain" to vote, up from 27 percent 
		in 2014. That increase is nearly double the five percentage point rise 
		in voter enthusiasm among all Americans over the same period, the poll 
		showed.
 
		
		 
		
 Enthusiasm appears especially high among Hispanic Democrats.
 
 Forty-two percent of Hispanic Democrats said they were "certain" to 
		vote, up from 29 percent in 2014. Among likely Hispanic voters, 60 
		percent said they will vote for a Democratic candidate for the House, 
		and 32 percent would back a Republican.
 
 Hispanics are a politically diverse group, with 55 percent of likely 
		voters identifying as Democrats, 31 percent as Republicans and 12 
		percent as independent, the poll showed.
 
 Just over half, 53 percent, of likely Hispanic voters said they were 
		"very motivated" to pick a candidate for Congress who opposes Trump, 
		compared with 43 percent of all likely voters, 75 percent of likely 
		Democratic voters and 9 percent of likely Republican voters.
 
 'GET YOUR VOICE HEARD'
 
 For candidates in border states with large Hispanic populations such as 
		Arizona, a fundamental question is whether Latino voters will turn up in 
		large numbers on Tuesday.
 
 The voting bloc has long held potential for the Democratic Party but 
		often disappoints. Record-low Hispanic turnout in 2014 was a warning 
		sign for both parties.
 
 Bea Nevarez hopes to turn that around, registering 800 people to vote 
		this year. In the final days before the elections, she went door-to-door 
		to encourage people to vote in Tucson.
 
 
		
		 
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			Volunteer Bea Nevarez stands for a portrait during door-to-door 
			canvassing in Tucson, Arizona, U.S., October 31, 2018. Picture taken 
			October 31, 2018. REUTERS/Caitlin O'Hara 
            
			 
            Nevarez, 18, works for a group called "Lucha," a Spanish word 
			meaning "struggle" or "fight." It is a partisan affiliate of One 
			Arizona, a broad alliance that says it has knocked on 1.5 million 
			doors in the state this year, part of a broad grassroots effort to 
			reverse declining Latino participation. One Arizona says it has 
			registered 200,000 voters this year. 
            "I'm out here trying to get your voice heard," Nevarez tells 
			reluctant voters.
 Her persistence paid off when she knocked on the door of Jose 
			Alberto and Norma Moreno, Mexican immigrants who are now U.S. 
			citizens.
 
 Sitting at his kitchen table, Jose Alberto Moreno, 62, at first told 
			Nevarez he had no intention of voting.
 
 "I don't believe in any of that. All politicians are liars," said 
			Moreno, who works at a furniture warehouse.
 
 But Nevarez insisted, engaging him in a conversation that eventually 
			turned to healthcare, Moreno's main concern. After a few minutes, he 
			agreed to vote.
 
 "I'm going to do it now. She convinced me," Moreno said.
 
 The Republican National Committee said it has also reached out to 
			voters in Arizona this year, as part of a drive in 11 states.
 
 America's 29 million Latinos account for nearly 13 percent of 
			eligible voters this year, but their turnout rate has declined since 
			2006, according to the Pew Research Center. Only 27 percent of 
			eligible Latinos voted in the last midterm elections in 2014, and 
			only 16 percent of those aged 18 to 35, Pew said.
 
 Some activists said they were motivated by watching Joe Arpaio, a 
			former Arizona sheriff whose anti-immigrant policies brought his 
			office multi-million-dollar penalties for racial profiling and 
			eventually a contempt of court conviction.
 
 He maintained that the prosecution was political, aimed at helping 
			oust him from office. Trump later pardoned him.
 
             
			"We have seen an igniting of fear, division and violence under this 
			(Trump) administration, but that's not new to Arizona," said 
			Alejandra Gomez, a co-executive director of Lucha. "We had the 
			original Trump here under Arpaio."
 (Reporting by Chris Kahn in New York and Daniel Trotta in Tuscon, 
			Arizona; Editing by Jason Szep and Grant McCool)
 
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