The News-Times

Latino group pushes Lamont to back Santiago for secretary of the state

- By Julia Bergman julia.bergman @hearstmedi­act.com

Just two days before the Democratic nominating convention, Latino officials from two organizati­ons are calling on Gov. Ned Lamont to support a Hispanic candidate for the open seat for Secretary of the State.

The officials want Lamont to back their pick: state Rep. Hilda Santiago, D-Meriden, one of two Hispanic women in the race, over Maritza Bond, New Haven’s health director.

Rep. Gerry Reyes, DWaterbury, chairman of the Black and Puerto Rican Caucus in the General Assembly, and Miguel Castro, chair of the Connecticu­t Hispanic Democratic Caucus, are among the group lobbying for Santiago.

“The top of the ticket has to look like a cross-section of the population,” Reyes said at the Capitol Wednesday. “We believe it’s well past time for a Hispanic to be at the top of the ticket.”

Connecticu­t has not had a Hispanic person elected to any statewide office, at least in recent memory.

In total, 13 people from the group, a combinatio­n of state and local legislator­s and members of the CHDC, have signed onto an open letter to the governor, to be published online Wednesday, underscori­ng the years-long effort to elect a Latino to statewide office.

“The Democratic Party has closed this door to our people time and time again,” they said in the letter. “This has to stop.”

State Reps. Minnie Gonzalez and Edwin Vargas, and Aidee Nieves, president of the Bridgeport City Council, are part of the group signing the letter. The state’s most prominent Latino elected official, House Majority Leader Jason Rojas, D-East Hartford, is not among the names listed.

“We ask that you, as our Governor, get involved in this critical race and make your preference known by endorsing Hilda Santiago.” the group said. “We had your back in 2018, and we ask that you have ours in 2022.”

In addition to Bond and Santiago, state Reps. Matt Lesser, D- Middletown, Stephanie Thomas, D-Norwalk, and Josh Elliott, DHamden, are running to be the Connecticu­t’s top election official. The Democrats’ nominating convention is Friday and Saturday in Hartford.

Castro said Santiago received 98 percent of the vote when the CHDC voted earlier this year on which candidate to endorse. He called Santiago “a trailblaze­r” who has an extensive history of legislatio­n and advocacy.

“It is time for our Latino community to have a seat at the table,” he said.

Bond, on Wednesday, earned the endorsemen­t of New Haven Mayor Justin Elicker. Elicker and his predecesso­r Toni Harp plan to hold a press conference Thursday to announce their support for Bond.

The races for Secretary of the State and state Treasurer have drawn the most interest of the six statewide constituti­onal offices. The office of the Comptrolle­r,

also an open seat, only has one Democratic candidate, Rep. Sean Scanlan, D-Guilford, who will face little or no opposition

When asked about his support for specific candidates in recent weeks, Lamont has said he doesn’t want to weigh in before the convention. But the governor has expressed privately that he wants a Hispanic candidate for Secretary of the State, multiple sources

said.

A statement issued by the governor’s campaign Wednesday indicated he would remain neutral — for now.

“Governor Lamont believes the delegates of the Democratic party should have the ultimate choice in who to endorse and will work closely with any of the fantastic candidates who will ultimately be part of the ticket to win in November,” campaign spokesman

Jake Lewis said.

Democrats have emphasized the importance of having a ticket in November that balances race, gender, and ethnicity. For decades, the party has nominated a Black candidate for Treasurer, “which has been critical in ensuring that we Democrats win at the state level and that a degree of equity is on our ballot every four years,” the letter from Castro and the others says.

“The time has come for Latinos to be granted the same opportunit­y and similar, equitable representa­tion at the statewide level,” they added.

A Hispanic candidate at the top of the ticket would increase Latino turnout, Castro said, helping Democrats up and down the ballot. A 15 percent increase in Latino turnout would result in 30,000 extra votes for Democrats, according to an analysis of election data by CHDC.

In the letter, he and the other officials issued a warning about the importance of this voting bloc for Democrats: “Nationally, 38 percent of Hispanic voters cast their ballots for Republican­s. It is only a matter of time before that trend begins to hit Connecticu­t.”

 ?? Contribute­d photo / House Democratic Caucus ?? Latino officials from two organizati­ons are calling on Gov. Ned Lamont to support a Hispanic candidate for the open seat for Secretary of the State, including state Rep. Hilda Santiago, D-Meriden, above.
Contribute­d photo / House Democratic Caucus Latino officials from two organizati­ons are calling on Gov. Ned Lamont to support a Hispanic candidate for the open seat for Secretary of the State, including state Rep. Hilda Santiago, D-Meriden, above.

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