Crucial Latino voters seek more attention from Biden
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[May 19, 2020]
By Saundra Amrhein and Simon Lewis
TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) - Like many Puerto
Ricans, Wilson Rivera holds President Donald Trump responsible for what
he sees as the U.S. government’s inadequate response to Hurricane Maria,
the 2017 storm that devastated the island and forced Rivera to relocate
to central Florida.
“He has to go,” he said of Trump.
But the 34-year-old school teacher is not sold on Joe Biden, Trump's
presumptive Democratic challenger in the Nov. 3 election.
Rivera and other Puerto Rican voters registered in Florida told Reuters
they want Biden to offer a bolder vision on issues affecting the nation
and their community, including recovery from the economic blow caused by
the coronavirus pandemic.
That worries Democratic strategists and Latino activists, who say the
thousands of Puerto Ricans displaced by the hurricane should be prime
Biden supporters in battleground Florida, which the Republican Trump won
by 1.2 percentage points in the 2016 election.
Not only have they widely derided Trump's handling of relief efforts for
the U.S. territory after Hurricane Maria, they also have seen Latinos
disproportionately left sickened and unemployed by the coronavirus
outbreak.
Reuters/Ipsos national polling shows that only about a quarter of
Hispanics chose Trump in a matchup with Biden. But the number supporting
Biden dipped to 46% from 51% from February to April as Trump held
steady.
Former President Barack Obama won 71% of Hispanic support in 2012 with
Biden as his running mate, according to the Pew Research Center.
Democrat Hillary Clinton won 66% of the Hispanic vote in 2016.
Democrats and Latino strategists say the Biden campaign needs to show
more urgency - both in its messaging and ground game - to win over what
is expected to be the largest non-white voting bloc in the 2020
presidential election.
“Just saying negative things about President Trump is not going to be
enough to get people excited to vote for anybody,” said Javier Cuebas, a
political consultant who worked on Democratic presidential campaigns for
Al Gore and John Kerry.
Biden campaign officials say they are expanding outreach to Hispanic
voters after a "small and scrappy" operation during the Democratic
presidential contest that effectively ended last month.
They are targeting major Hispanic populations in states like Florida and
Arizona, as well as smaller but potentially decisive communities in
Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, which have larger Latino
populations than Trump’s 2016 margin of victory in those crucial states.
“We haven't turned on the ignition yet," said senior Biden adviser
Cristóbal Alex, who previously headed the influential Latino Victory
Fund. "What you're going to see once we do is a very substantial
increase in support for Vice President Biden."
COMPLICATED OUTREACH
Biden's task of turning out Hispanics has been complicated by the
coronavirus pandemic, which has limited him to holding virtual events
from his home.
The campaign must quickly find new ways to make the person-to-person
contacts needed to turn out Latino voters, said Vanessa Cardenas, a
former staffer who worked on Latino outreach for Biden's primary
campaign.
"You've got to speak their language, but I don't mean just speaking
Spanish - you have to speak to the issues they care about," said
Cardenas. "They have to feel a personal connection to you."
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Democratic 2020 presidential candidate and former U.S Vice President
Joe Biden gestures as he speaks at the UnidosUS Annual Conference,
in San Diego, California, U.S., August 5, 2019. REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File Photo
The voting bloc's diverse interests make that task challenging.
In Florida, the state's 1.1 million Puerto Ricans mostly vote for
Democrats, while the 1.5 million Cuban Americans are traditionally
Republican thanks to the party's hardline policies toward the
Communist-run Cuban government.
Many Latinos are part of evangelical congregations drawn to the
Republican Party’s opposition to abortion and gay rights.
Trump, effectively unopposed as the Republican nominee, has had more
time to build out “Latinos for Trump," an initiative kicked off by
Vice President Mike Pence in Miami in June 2019.
Alex Garcia, regional political director for Trump Victory, said
Trump's appeal to the Latino community would highlight his domestic
and foreign policy records.
Many Hispanic voters oppose Trump's drive to build a U.S.-Mexico
border wall and his aggressive deportation practices. But the Obama
administration’s record of deporting large numbers of people has
also left some Latinos wary of Biden.
The former vice president has said he would put a moratorium on
deportations, except for violent offenders, reverse Trump’s
executive orders on immigration, and introduce an immigration reform
bill on his first day in the White House.
The Biden campaign has hosted virtual events this month under the
“Todos con Biden” (All with Biden) banner, and the candidate's wife,
Jill Biden, held a video call with Latino leaders in Arizona last
week.
She also has weekly calls with members of the Congressional Hispanic
Caucus, who are lobbying her husband to appoint a Latina as his vice
presidential candidate in a show of commitment to Hispanic voters.
The outreach so far has drawn a lukewarm response from some voters.
Jose Nieves, 44, senior pastor of First Kissimmee United Methodist
Church near Orlando, Florida, said his congregation is filled with
people struggling to pay rent and buy food after losing tourism jobs
because of coronavirus shutdowns.
Latino unemployment reached 18.9% nationwide this month, higher than
other ethnicities, and data from Florida shows they have been
disproportionately hit by the virus, making up at least a third of
COVID-19 cases in the state.
"I definitely feel there is a disconnect with the needs of the
Puerto Rican community and those who are in political power," said
Nieves, adding he was willing to hear Biden's plans to address the
community's needs.
Law enforcement officer Jacob Ruiz, 43, of Kissimmee has grown
disillusioned with Trump since voting for him in 2016. He said Biden
could win him and other Latinos over if he offers a convincing plan
for the country's recovery.
“If (Biden) can be a voice of unity, calming people, while
communicating a vision so that people have hope," Ruiz said, "I
think he can be successful.”
(Reporting by Saundra Amrhein in Tampa, Florida, and Simon Lewis in
Washington; Additional reporting by Richard Cowan, Trevor Hunnicutt
and Chris Kahn; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Peter Cooney)
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