The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

State’s Latino turnout signals greater political engagement

- By Ana Radelat CTMIRROR.ORG

There was a significan­t jump in Latino participat­ion in the midterm election across the nation, and most likely in Connecticu­t, too.

Latinos for years have had the potential to become a powerful voting bloc. But their failure to turn up at the polls historical­ly has hurt their political clout.

In this year’s midterms, however, they helped give Democrats key wins in Senate races in Nevada and Arizona. In Texas, turnout rose dramatical­ly in heavily Latino precincts and also was high in Latino areas of California, Florida and New York. There will be 43 Latino representa­tives in the next Congress — a record number.

In Connecticu­t, it’s much more difficult to pinpoint Latino voting participat­ion. But an analysis by the Connecticu­t Mirror determined that cities and towns in the state where Latinos make up 25 percent or more of the population all experience­d a significan­t increase in voter turnout.

Better organized Latinos try to shape Lamont administra­tion

And, in some of those towns — including Meriden, Ansonia, Stamford, Norwalk, Danbury, New Haven, New London, Windham and Waterbury — the growth in turnout exceeded the boost in voter turnout in the midterm election statewide.

The statewide turnout in the 2014 midterm was 55.6 percent, and 65.2 percent in the latest midterm. In New Haven, for instance, turnout was 38.3 percent in 2014 and 58 percent in 2018. Nearly 30 percent of the city’s residents identified themselves as Hispanic or Latino to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Many of the more than 540,000 Latinos in Connecticu­t live in the larger cities, which historical­ly have lower turnout.

“People tend to be more transient in cities, and that leads to lower voting rates,” said Gabe Rosenberg, spokesman for the secretary of the

state’s office.

The gap between those larger cities and smaller, higher-turnout towns, however, shrank in the midterm.

“Latinos saw there was a lot at stake, so they came out,” said Marie Bertrand, incoming president of the Connecticu­t Hispanic Bar Associatio­n.

Nationally, a record 29 million Latinos were eligible to vote in this year’s election, according to the Pew Research Center. Preliminar­y data suggests there was a significan­t jump in Latino participat­ion.

Speaking at a panel discussion in Los Angeles, Tom Perez, the first Latino chairman of the Democratic National Committee, was quoted as saying the turnout of first-time voters, including Latinos, was “a remarkable phenomenon.”

Since Latinos, in general, favor Democrats over Republican candidates, their increased participat­ion in the midterm bolstered a “blue wave” that helped Democrats seize control of the U.S. House of Representa­tives and a number of other political offices, including the U.S. Senate seats in Arizona and Nevada and governorsh­ips across the country.

The week after the Nov. 6 election, Rep. Ben Ray Lujan, chairman of the Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee, said Latino participat­ion surged 174 percent in 2018, compared to the 2014 midterms.

“Latino voters played a pivotal role in taking back the House,” Lujan told reporters during a conference call organized by the political action committee Latino Victory. “Evidence is clear: Early and active and robust outreach to communitie­s of color — in this case, into the Hispanic community — clearly pays off.”

In Connecticu­t, it’s harder to decipher the impact of the more energized Latino electorate, but it may have boosted Democrat Ned Lamont’s bid for the governor’s office and helped Democrats boost their numbers in the General Assembly.

A coalition of Latino groups has emerged in Connecticu­t to capitalize on the increased political participat­ion of the state’s Latinos, and ensure that they are represente­d in positions of influence and power.

The newly formed CT Latino Task Force, a coalition of about 20 individual­s and groups that includes the Connecticu­t Hispanic Bar Associatio­n, the Connecticu­t Chapter of the Hispanic Federation and NALEO, is collecting resumes from people they say are qualified Latinos who want to work in the Lamont administra­tion, and is making sure they are reviewed by the governor-elect’s transition team.

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