Political

Obama announced $20M commitment to engage and mobilize Hispanic Voters.

Senator Barack Obama’s Presidential campaign together with the Democratic National Committee announced a $20 million commitment to engaging and mobilizing Hispanic voters for the November election at a press conference with Senator Ken Salazar (D-CO), Congressman Raúl Grijalva (D-AZ), Congresswoman Hilda Solis (D-CA) and Congressman José Serrano (D-NY).

Latino Voting Statistics.

The Tomás Rivera Policy Institute (TRPI) offers important Latino voting statistics that will influence the 2008 US Presidential race.

2008 National Survey of Latinos: Hispanic Voter Attitudes.

Hispanic registered voters support Democrat Barack Obama for president over Republican John McCain by 66% to 23%, according to a nationwide survey of 2,015 Latinos conducted by the Pew Hispanic Center.

Voter turnout up 7 Million in 2006.

Some 96 million voted in the 2006 congressional elections, an increase of 7 million from 2002, according to a report released by the U.S. Census Bureau.

There they go again.

I guess once was not enough, so the group of angry, fear-mongering loudmouths mimicking Lou Dobbs, trying to make names for themselves by whipping up an anti-immigrant frenzy are at it again. Just read the headline below.

The Federation for American Immigration Reform is holding its annual “Hold Their Feet to the Fire” talk radio rally September 10 and 11 in Washington, DC. FAIR expects this to be the largest of these events with upwards of 50 to 75 talk radio hosts expected to broadcast from Washington. FAIR says the goal of the event is to “counteract the special interests attempting to set an amnesty agenda for the new Congress and the next president.” By Jose Cancela.

The Internet and the 2008 Election.

A record-breaking 46% of Americans have used the internet, email or cell phone text messaging to get news about the campaign, share their views and mobilize others. And Barack Obama’s backers have an edge in the online political environment.

Winning Latino Votes in the General Election.

With the focus now squarely on the general election, the pressure intensifies to work those pieces of the demographic pie that could mean The White House. Among the tastier slices? U.S. Latino voters.

Distinct Ethnic & Political Identity for Mexican Americans.

Mexican Americans identify with their ethnic culture, and ethnic identification remains strong across generations, according to a report released by the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center. The report — based on the study and book titled “Generations of Exclusions: Mexican Americans, Assimilation, and Race” (Russell Sage Foundation, 2008) — concluded that ethnic assimilation among Mexican Americans is slow. The results, which are drawn from a longitudinal and intergenerational research study that updates “The Mexican American People” (1970), measured various markers of assimilation over a nearly 40-year time span.

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