Houston Chronicle Sunday

Latinos surge to polls in battlegrou­nds

Trump refuses to cede states as Clinton seeks to build on groundswel­l

- By Jonathan Martin

PEMBROKE PINES, Fla. — Hispanic voters in key states surged to cast their ballots in the final days of early voting this weekend, a demonstrat­ion of political power that lifted Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al hopes and threatened to block Donald Trump’s path to the White House.

In Florida, energized by the groundswel­l of Latino support and hoping to drive even more voters to the polls, Clinton visited a handful of immigrant communitie­s Saturday and rallied Democrats in a town filled with Hispanic and Caribbean migrants.

“Weare seeing tremendous momentum, large numbers of people turning out, breaking records,” Clinton said in Pembroke Pines before cutting her remarks short when torrential afternoon rain began falling on the mixed-race crowd. Before taking the stage, she greeted voters at a heavily Cuban early voting center in West Miami and then stopped in at her storefront field office in Miami’s Little

Haiti.

Indeed, even as she fought a rear-guard action to defend a series of more heavily white states that appear to have tightened — making trips to Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and New Hampshire — Clinton appeared to find a growing advantage in the more diverse presidenti­al battlegrou­nds.

This long, unpredicta­ble and often down right bizarre election was, in other words, ending along the lines it had been contested all along: with Americans sharply divided along demographi­c lines between the two candidates. But Democrats continued to hold the upper hand, thanks in part to the changing nature of the electorate in the most crucial states: Florida and a cluster of states in the South and West.

Trump also began the day in this state, rallying supporters in Tampa, where he recognized Hispanic supporters in his audience and declared “the Cubans just endorsed me,” citing an award he had been given by a group of Cuban-Americans. Without explaining what he meant, Trump said: “The Hispanic vote is turning out to be much different than people thought.”

He also continued to assail Clinton over her use of a private email server as secretary of state, highlighti­ng the FBI’s apparent discovery of messages on a computer used by Huma Abedin, a longtime Clinton aide, and her estranged husband, former Rep. Anthony Weiner. But, continuing a recent pattern, Trump hurled claims at Clinton that were highly speculativ­e.

“Anthony Weiner has probably every classified email ever sent,” said Trump. “And, knowing this guy, he probably studied every single one, in between using his machine for other purposes.”

The FBI is investigat­ing whether Weiner sent sexually explicit text messages to a 15-year-old.

Trump also stopped on Saturday in North Carolina and planned to take advantage of the time-zone difference­s by flying west for evening rallies in Colorado and Nevada.

By holding events in those four increasing­ly diverse states, he was signaling a refusal to concede any ground to Clinton and rejecting the strategy of past presidenti­al candidates who have fought within the confines of a narrower electoral map in the campaign’s final hours.

He even announced Saturday morning that he planned to add a stop in Minnesota, long a Democratic bulwark and a state he had not been contesting.

But the evidence from polling and the early voting turnout seemed to indicate he was facing the possibilit­y of sweeping losses in states with sizable Hispanic population­s, most likely affected by the racially tinged language he has used since beginning his campaign more than 16 months ago, when he claimed the ranks of Mexican migrants were filled with rapists and drug dealers.

“The story of this election may be the mobilizati­on of the Hispanic vote,” said Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, an antiTrump Republican who has pleaded with his party to do more to win over Latinos. “So Trump deserves the award for Hispanic turnout. He did more to get them out than any Democrat has ever done.”

The question for Republican­s, just 12 years after President George W. Bush carried at least a third of the Hispanic vote, is how long the Trump-inflicted damage with Latinos will haunt them.

Raising the specter of how difficult it has been for California Republican­s since former Gov. Pete Wilson’s hard line toward undocument­ed migrants there, Graham said, “If we don’t come to grips with the demographi­c challenges we have with Hispanics in presidenti­al politics, we’ll never right the ship.”

In Florida, at least 200,000 more Hispanics had voted early as of Friday than did during the entire early voting period four years ago, according to an analysis by Steve Schale, a Democratic strategist who helped run President Barack Obama’s two campaigns in the state.

But it was not just Florida where Hispanics were poised to send a powerful message. In Nevada, which has the fastest-growing Latino population in the West, Democrats appeared to have built a fearsome advantage in Las Vegas’ Clark County at the end of early voting Friday, largely because of a surge of votes from Mexican-Americans. The early voting period was extended to 10 p.m. at one Hispanic grocery store in Las Vegas, where the images of hundreds of voters waiting in line ricocheted across the internet.

Hispanic turnout also soared during the early voting period in Arizona, which has voted for a Democrat for president only once since 1952 and where Clinton’s campaign made a late push with TV advertisin­g and rallies to snatch the state from the Republican­s.

The same study found that as of the end of early voting on Thursday, five states with surging Hispanic population­s — Arizona, Colorado, Florida, North Carolina and Nevada — had already cast ballots equivalent to more than 50 percent of their 2012 total turnout.

While the changing face of the U.S. electorate seemed to offer Clinton a political cushion, the FBI’s decision to continue investigat­ing her use of a private email server as secretary of state appeared to push some loosely committed white voters away.

 ?? Yi-Chin Lee / Houston Chronicle ?? Dominique Gooding of the Harris County Clerk’s Office helps set up for Election Day. Story on page A12.
Yi-Chin Lee / Houston Chronicle Dominique Gooding of the Harris County Clerk’s Office helps set up for Election Day. Story on page A12.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States