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News
Hispanic Clevelanders' Effort to Boost Latino Vote
Aired August 14, 2000
Like the Republicans two weeks ago, the Democrats
plan to host a diverse panel of speakers during their convention. While
both parties are courting Latinos, they're not voting in the numbers that
reflect their status as the country's fastest growing minority. 90.3's
Yolanda Perdomo reports on what some Hispanics in Cleveland are doing
to try to get their community to participate in the process.
Yolanda PerdomoTwo men, three women, all
Hispanic, are having a lively discussion at Esperanza, a Latino social
services agency on Cleveland's west side. Their goal (is) to register
1,000 Latinos to vote and to get out the Hispanic vote in November. According
to voter watchdog groups, less than half the Latinos eligible to vote
in the U.S. actually do so.
Lou ReyesFor the first time, what you're
seeing is a group getting together, coming together, concerned Latinos,
all professionals, everyone a business owner or corporate person saying,
"we've had enough."
YPLou Reyes is the president of the Hispanic
Political Action Committee, or H-PAC. He's also the owner of Cleveland
Life magazine. Reyes says as long as Latinos continue to be politically
apathetic, politicians will continue to ignore them. He helped form H-PAC
a year ago to educate Latinos about the voting process and to encourage
their participation in the system.
LRWe don't vote - and one thing I've always
said, we kind of get what we deserve. We haven't been organized. We've
allowed other people to tell us what to do.
You've got Lincoln West High School that's 70% Latino
students. But yet there's no advanced placement program. Nothing. How
can you ignore that? How can you do that? So this is something that frustrates
our community. We have a lack of jobs in major corporations. Certainly
a lack of jobs in the public sector. And once again we're ignored.
YPH-PAC hopes to change that by reaching
out to Hispanics through family and community events, such as a pancake
breakfast at a church on the west side, and by going door-to-door in different
Latino neighborhoods. Vivian Riccio is the executive director of Esperanza.
Vivian RiccioWe want them to contact their
councilman. We want them to contact their congress person who has bilingual
individuals working in their office, and express their opinion. We want
them to talk to their children about the importance of voting. And that
it is a responsibility that we all have to carry. And most of all we want
them to get up on election day, go to the ballot box and cast their vote.
YPThe goal, says H-PAC member Maritza Perez,
is to make Latinos understand that they are part of the political process.
Perez, who works for the office of minority affairs at Cleveland State
University, says she joined the group to help Hispanics realize that they
can make a difference in their community.
Maritza PerezI think if they register, they
vote, they feel empowerment, I think then is when individuals are ready
to start making that step to better the world they live in.
YPAn estimated 50,000 - 70,000 Latinos live
in Cuyahoga county, yet only one Hispanic has ever been elected to Cleveland
City Council. H-PAC president Lou Reyes notes that the lack of Latinos
in positions of power has a direct impact on whether Latinos turn out
on election day. He says one thing that may encourage Hispanics to get
politcally involved is reminding them to think about their children.
LRThey have to look at their little boy or
little girl and say what do I want for my child? What do I want them to
have? Do I want them to go to a good school? Do I want them to have the
same rights as other people have? So when you decide that you want to
be involved politically, look at your children. And if you want more than
what you have, if you want more for your children, then get involved politically.
But if you continue to do nothing, you will continue to get nothing. We
have to work now and we have to strive now and we have to work together.
YPThis election year, Republicans and Democrats
alike are heavily courting Latino voters. The National Association of
Latino Elected and Appointed Officials Educational Fund projects that
close to six million Hispanics will vote in November - that's a little
more than half the number of Latinos in this country. Yolanda Perdomo,
90.3 WCPN®, 90.3 FM.
Suggested Websites
National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials
Educational:
League of United Latin American Citizens:
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