According to this
story about a recent New York Times poll, Hispanics believe in the
Democratic Party's principles of government with regard to managing the economy,
education, jobs, and the like, but agree with the Republicans on social issues,
particularly abortion and gay marriage.
This certainly creates a dilemma for the individuals who have these feelings,
but it also puts a lot of pressure on political parties to try to cater to
Hispanics. The article says that the group rivals African-Americans in numbers,
but I was pretty sure that they were already the largest non-white group in
America. Whatever the truth is, it's a huge block of voters that the two
parties really need to focus on.
One of the things the article only briefly mentions is how the parties have
tended to focus on Hispanics as one large group with monolithic tendencies and
beliefs, which is entirely untrue. The split between Democrat government and
Republican social tendencies is shown as one example of this, but more
importantly, not all people labeled "Hispanic" are created the same. Cubans in
Miami are going to have vastly different beliefs and voting patterns than
Mexicans in California and Puerto Ricans in New York and Central Americans
everywhere. People in these groups came to the U.S. for a variety of reasons,
from a variety of conditions, and live in a variety of ways now. To lump them
all into one group that needs to be addressed would be folly on the same level
of doing the same with white or black voters.
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