Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Voting for the first time

Some become citizens to vote out president

- GUSTAVO ARELLANO

For the past 20 years, the Serranos of Lakewood have kept a family pact based on equal parts patriotism and vengeance:

Become an American citizen. Register to vote. And go with the Democrats to stick it to the Republican­s.

Rafael and Carmela Serrano came to Southern California in 1991 from Guadalajar­a, Mexico, with six of their eight children after their general store went under. They had wonderful memories of the Southland from visits to Disneyland, and figured life here would be peaceful and welcoming. It wasn’t. California was about to embark on a decade of legislativ­e xenophobia led by the GOP. First came Propositio­n 187, the landmark 1994 ballot initiative that sought to make life miserable for immigrants without legal status. Similar laws spread in cities across the state that decade and eventually metastasiz­ed into a national anti-immigrant movement that helped plop Donald J.

Trump in the White House in the 2016 election.

“We all came to come ahead, not to take away anyone’s bread,” said Gabby Serrano, 46, as she stood in front of her parent’s wellkept tract home. Three of her siblings — Francisco, Juan, and Teresa — nodded in agreement. Signs for Congresswo­man Linda Sanchez and Assemblyma­n Anthony Rendón decorated the lawn. Teresa wore an “I Voted” sticker, while Juan’s son held mail-in ballots other family members had yet to turn in. “To see such anti-Mexican hate was just hurtful.”

“Our eyes were quickly opened,” added 42-year-old Francisco. He remembered walkouts at Artesia High School against 187 that he and his brother didn’t participat­e in for fear that immigratio­n agents might take them away.

“We couldn’t vote back then, because we weren’t citizens,” responded Juan, a 44-year-old supervisor for Hawaiian Garden’s community services department. “But I remember being a teen, and promising that as soon as I could, I’d register as a Democrat.”

He was the first Serrano to become a U.S. citizen, in 2000. Other siblings followed. And then they waited for their parents to do the same.

And kept waiting. Rafael, 73, and 70-yearold Carmela didn’t seem to be in a hurry. Life in el Norte had been just fine as permanent residents. They thought taking the citizenshi­p test in English would be too hard. Then came Trump. In March, the married couple of 53 years took their citizenshi­p oath and immediatel­y registered to vote. Last week, they dropped off their ballots at a voting drop box in Hawaiian Gardens before embarking on a long-planned vacation to Guadalajar­a. Juan filmed the occasion, then put it up on the Serranos’ TikTok channel with “This is America” by Childish Gambino as a soundtrack.

They voted for Joe Biden, of course.

And they’re not the only first-time Latino voters expected to do the same.

Juan Serrano said he’s spoken to scores of Hawaiian Gardens residents who registered to vote specifical­ly to get Trump out of office. He compared the president’s inadverten­t inspiratio­n for these firsttimer­s to his own experience with Pete Wilson, the California governor who championed Propositio­n 187 and arguably led an entire generation of Latinos in the state to turn blue.

“Pete Wilson was my idol. He was my hero,” said Juan sarcastica­lly, but with gratitude. “Thanks to him, we were going to vote. We grew up with that injustice.”

“It’s like the J-Lo film,” Gabby added. “Enough is enough.”

The Serranos are what small-town Mexicans like my family call gente decente — literally, “decent people,” but really signifying humble folks who don’t like to draw attention to themselves and are exemplars of community life.

For 25 years, the Republican Party has alienated gente decente. And if the Serranos are any indication, this is the year that these people will get their revenge.

In this election, Latinos represent the largest minority voter bloc — 32 million strong — for the first time.

The only thing that can save the GOP and Trump from a historical shellackin­g is, well, history.

Only three times in the last 40 years of presidenti­al elections has the Latino voter turnout rate exceeded 50%. In the 2016 election, according to Pew Research Center estimates, 65.3% of eligible white voters did so, while Black voters did the same at 59.6%. Latinos? Only 47.6%.

This embarrassi­ng figure leads to bad clichés about how Latinos are the “sleeping giant” of the American electorate and have yet to “flex their political muscle.”

Latinos should be ashamed for their apathy, according to the Serranos.

“If you don’t vote, it’s like not using your voice,” said Teresa.

“It’s frustratin­g,” said Gabby, the last Serrano sibling in the United States who hasn’t become an American citizen. She then looked at her 26-year-old daughter, Ana Ascencio. Though she was born here, Ascencio had never voted in her life.

“I would always scold her, ‘Vote!’ ” Gabby said. “You don’t know when the government can deport people like me. And If I’m gone, who’s going to take care of you and your sister?”

I asked Ana why she hadn’t voted before.

“I don’t know,” she responded.

“Por floja,” Juan cracked. Laziness.

But Trump changed her perspectiv­e, just like her grandparen­ts.

“It’s my time now,” she said.

Now Juan smiled. “My dad always loves to talk politics,” he said. “And he hates Trump. He’s from a different generation. You can’t have falta de respeto [lack of respect] for people. And that’s what Trump has against Mexicans.”

“My grandpa came as a bracero to Bakersfiel­d,” Gabby said. “And he’d always say about the United States that those who take advantage of the opportunit­ies and didn’t do anything bad could get ahead. But Trump’s only done bad. My parents get angry at what he has done to this country.”

While the Serrano kids were kind and funny, I wanted to talk to their parents. So Juan dialed up Rafael and Carmela on FaceTime. The two sat at a plastic-wrapped kitchen table in their Guadalajar­a home and beamed. They reminded me of my aunts and uncles — soft-spoken, of few words. Gente decente.

How did they feel about voting for the first time?

“Happy, content, and proud,” Rafael said.

“Our hearts fill up for being able to participat­e,” Carmela responded.

What’s so bad about Trump?

“He talks a bunch of things that doesn’t sit well with you,” Rafael said. “This man sows division.”

“The U.S. is a strong country,” Carmela said. “A president that’s just is the best.”

What did they want other Latinos to learn from their example?

“May we serve as motivation for other people that sí se puede,” Rafael said.

I thanked them for their time, and they did the same. Then Carmela, like any modern-day decent person, had one last thought.

“Gracias, and follow us on TikTok!”

‘The U.S. is a strong country. A president that’s just is the best.’ — CARMELA SERRANO, who became a U.S. citizen in March in order to vote against President Trump

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? THE SERRANO FAMILY vowed to always vote Democrat after Prop. 187 passed in 1994. The Trump presidency has renewed the family’s longtime commitment.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times THE SERRANO FAMILY vowed to always vote Democrat after Prop. 187 passed in 1994. The Trump presidency has renewed the family’s longtime commitment.
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 ?? TERESA GONZALEZ, Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? daughter of Rafael and Carmela Serrano, who came to the U.S. from Guadalajar­a in 1991 and voted for the first time this year.
TERESA GONZALEZ, Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times daughter of Rafael and Carmela Serrano, who came to the U.S. from Guadalajar­a in 1991 and voted for the first time this year.

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