Los Angeles Times

Vote canvassers meet, aid people in need

- By Melissa Gomez

PHOENIX — When Imelda Quiroz began knocking on doors this month in search of registered voters, one question would often lead to a glimpse of their daily struggles.

“How has the pandemic affected you?” she would prompt in English, sometimes in Spanish. She wanted to get a sense of how voters were doing and what issues were important to them ahead of the November election.

What Quiroz heard was an outpouring from people worried about paying next month’s rent, electric or water bills. Parents were struggling with their children shifting to online learning without laptops or internet access, she said.

“Many had lost their jobs,” Quiroz recalled on a Saturday afternoon as she walked among houses in a predominan­tly Latino Phoenix neighborho­od. While knocking on doors for the nonprofit, nonpartisa­n group Mi Familia Vota, the Arizonan has met Republican­s, Democrats and independen­ts blindsided by the pandemic and economic crisis.

Advocacy groups returning to face-to-face outreach are finding a landscape changed by the coronaviru­s, and they have become lifelines, through food banks or passing along contacts for organizati­ons that help with rent or utility bills. But often, canvassers said, people just want to be heard.

“When I can, I give them informatio­n,” Quiroz said, and when she can’t, she sympathize­s. “Because what they want is to talk.”

Sometimes it’s hard to know how to respond, she said. “Many are hopeless.”

In Arizona, a key battlegrou­nd state, outreach groups fear the crisis could suppress the vote among communitie­s of color focused less on the election and more on surviving.

“We’re really a bit concerned that the pandemic is going to have an impact on voter registrati­on and voting among Latinos,” said Joseph Garcia, executive director of Chicanos Por La Causa Action Fund, noting the issues facing the community.

Latinos, who are being courted by both presidenti­al campaigns, are often on the front lines of the pandemic as essential workers, and in Arizona they and Native Americans have been hospitaliz­ed at higher rates than other groups.

Nationally, the unemployme­nt rate for Latinos during the pandemic is worse than during the recession of the late 2000s, and 70% of Latinos surveyed in April by the Pew Research Center said they did not have emergency funds to cover expenses for the next three months.

“It’s understand­able that our families are very worried and focused on COVID,” said Héctor Sánchez Barba, chief executive and executive director of Mi Familia Vota. But the disproport­ionate impact the virus has had on the community is a reason for voters to prioritize politics, he said. “This is why we must organize and raise our voices.”

Because face-to-face outreach is important for Latinos and other voters of color, community leaders say, some nonprofits and politicall­y aligned organizati­ons have restarted door-knocking to reach communitie­s often missed through online and digital outreach.

President Trump’s reelection campaign has said that it has continued to hold meet-ups in the state for supporters, reaching thousands; campaign efforts for Democratic nominee Joe Biden have remained largely virtual as the former vice president said his campaign was following public health experts’ guidelines during the pandemic.

Both campaigns are competing intensely in Arizona, which Trump won in 2016 by less than four percentage points. Polling suggests Biden is ahead, and turnout among Latino voters could be key for Democrats in both the presidenti­al election and the race between Republican Sen. Martha McSally and Democratic challenger Mark Kelly. A sharp rise in Latino voter turnout during the 2018 midterm election helped deliver Democrat Kyrsten Sinema a U.S. Senate seat, some say. She won 70% of the Latino vote.

These days, Mi Familia Vota canvassers have shifted their focus from surveying the community about the pandemic to educating voters on the candidates and a ballot measure on education funding, and reminding them to vote early and by mail. The group is still working to connect voters in need with help for domestic violence and mental illness and other concerns.

The organizati­on wants to make the connection between voters’ personal struggles and the importance of voting this year, said Eduardo Sainz, Mi Familia Vota’s Arizona state director.

“Individual­s are fed up,” he said. “They know that life could be better.”

Other groups are also acting as intermedia­ries. The Arizona Coalition for Change partners with churches to pair voter registrati­on and food drives. Our Voice, Our Vote, a progressiv­e voter mobilizati­on group, held mask giveaways and voter registrati­on drives in Maricopa County.

Central Arizonans for a Sustainabl­e Economy, an organizati­on focused on immigrant rights, economic justice and civic engagement, helped newly registered voters apply for unemployme­nt benefits and set up a hardship fund to help service workers until they received benefits.

“It’s very hard to engage civically if you are disenfranc­hised because you have no economic stability,” said Rachel Sulkes, communicat­ions director for CASE, echoing a core message for the group.

On a recent Saturday morning, canvassers for Our Voice, Our Vote were out in Chandler, a predominan­tly white city southeast of Phoenix, to knock on doors. The canvassers are all required to wear masks and face shields while out in the community.

Danaysha Smith, the organizati­on’s regional field manager for Maricopa County, said she often reminds her team of about 20 canvassers to be empathetic while door-knocking. Often, a voter’s experience losing someone to COVID-19 or struggling with bills resonates with their own story, she said.

“We’re all really going through the same situation at the same time,“she said.

That is the case for Karen Hernandez, the organizati­on’s statewide field director. Along with Smith, she was out with canvassers on Saturday, wearing a mask that read “Our Voice, Our Vote.”

Hernandez, the daughter of immigrants, said she shares her story while canvassing. It can make it easier to connect with voters, especially on days when the temperatur­e hits 117 degrees.

Hernandez said she and her family recently had to rally around her aunt, a single mother of two, whose work cleaning houses vanished because of the pandemic. “To have someone ... in my family have to go through that is really difficult,” she said.

She’s run across voters who are in need, just like her aunt, she said, and when she can, helps them find resources. “With this work, I really feel like I’m doing something.”

Smith remembers an older man she spoke with while phone-banking in July.

The Latino military veteran, a conservati­ve living in rural Tucson, was worried about leaving his home to buy essential supplies, and he was upset about how Trump was handling the pandemic. The call lasted 44 minutes and 30 seconds.

“I knew he needed someone to really unload and unleash some of his frustratio­ns with,” Smith said. “These are the type of people that need us.”

 ?? Melissa Gomez Los Angeles Times ?? AS GET-OUT-THE-VOTE efforts ramp up in Arizona, canvassers have become a lifeline for some residents. Above, Imelda Quiroz talks to a voter in Phoenix.
Melissa Gomez Los Angeles Times AS GET-OUT-THE-VOTE efforts ramp up in Arizona, canvassers have become a lifeline for some residents. Above, Imelda Quiroz talks to a voter in Phoenix.

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