Los Angeles Times

Latino Leaders Are Needed for a Better Future

As Latinos continue to comprise more of the population and people entering the workforce, the Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus Institute (CHCI) is working to give more of these people chances to lead.

- Marco A. Davis President and CEO, Congressio­nal Hispanic Caucus Institute (CHCI)

Since early in 2020, the nation has been reeling from the COVID-19 pandemic. And then the live video-recorded murder of George Floyd, with the subsequent widespread acknowledg­ment that his killing was sadly one amongst countless others, has shaken our society to its core. Together, these events have exposed deep racial, economic, and social inequity in our society and the devastatin­g consequenc­es of that inequity, particular­ly on Black and Latino communitie­s.

Some have said we are living in two pandemics — COVID-19 and systemic racism — and it is clear that this moment calls for a swift and dramatic response. But what is the way forward?

I believe one contributi­ng factor to our current reality, where issues and events are affecting different population­s in different ways, is the fact that historical, structural, systemic racism and inequality have locked many people and groups out of leadership and decisionma­king roles.

As a result, our communitie­s have often been overlooked or ignored, and at times targeted for discrimina­tion by the people empowered to create policies and allocate resources.

Strength in numbers

But we Latinos are 60+ million strong — nearly 1 out of 5 people and growing, due to a higher birth rate than other demographi­c groups. We are also a young population; we are a quarter of the student population in America’s schools, and will represent half of all new workers joining the workforce by 2025.

There has been ample evidence that diverse groups make better decisions, and organizati­ons with diverse leadership are more effective and profıtable. Similarly, leaders who come from, and have extensive knowledge and understand­ing of the communitie­s they serve have been found to be more responsive to, and better embraced by, those communitie­s.

Increasing leadership diversity will be benefıcial to the Latino community and the nation as a whole. But it won’t happen organicall­y or spontaneou­sly — the public, private, and nonprofıt sectors must be intentiona­l about creating and supporting efforts to place more Latinos in key decision-making roles so their insights, creativity, and perspectiv­es help make better decisions that address vital concerns and improve conditions for all people.

A chance to lead

Latinos have tremendous talent and can contribute in impactful ways to creating a more prosperous society. The CHCI’s mission is to prepare and help move Latinos into leadership roles in strategic ways. By providing leadership training, life-changing experience­s, and profession­al developmen­t resources and opportunit­ies, we help put Latinos on the path to positions of power, making an impact in whatever sector or fıeld they choose.

We must ensure that real, longterm investment­s are made in Hispanic communitie­s, including funding for better schools, healthcare, and other social services, as well as access to capital and fınancial opportunit­ies to start a business, buy a home, or pursue higher education.

Latino representa­tion must be increased at the leadership level to reduce inequity in America and make justice universal. It is imperative — it’s a smart business decision, it’s in everyone’s best interest, and it’s the right thing to do.

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