Los Angeles Times

Reaching out to Asian voters

Hillary Clinton talks tax breaks and immigratio­n in the San Gabriel Valley.

- By Javier Panzar javier.panzar@latimes.com

Jeanne Serrano traveled nearly 400 miles from the Bay Area suburb of Vallejo to San Gabriel to hear Hillary Clinton’s pitch to woo Asian American voters. When the 46-year-old attorney walked out of the hotel ballroom after the Democratic presidenti­al hopeful’s speech Thursday, she was nearly in tears.

Clinton had devoted time to calling for immigratio­n reform, and she drew some of her strongest applause when she vowed to shorten wait times for those seeking visas.

“I have a brother that we have been waiting more than 15 years and still he is not here, he is the last person we have in the Philippine­s,” Serrano said. “To hear her talk about it — I was so fired up.”

It was exactly the kind of connection Clinton’s campaign was looking to make at the San Gabriel Hilton in the official kickoff of an effort to cement support from the fastest-growing racial group in the nation. While California is considered a lock for Democrats next fall, Asian voters in swing states such as Nevada and Virginia could make the difference. The event was aimed as much at solidifyin­g votes of those in the crowd as recruiting volunteers to help sway other Asian voters across the country.

Before introducin­g Clinton, Rep. Judy Chu (D-Monterey Park), chairwoman of the Congressio­nal Asian Pacific American Caucus, pointed to Virginia Sen. Mark R. Warner’s razor-thin 2014 defeat of his Republican opponent, in which one exit poll found 68% of Asians voted for the Democrat.

“We’ve gone from being marginaliz­ed to becoming the margin of victory,” Chu said.

Hundreds — some from as far away as Nevada — snaked through the lobby of the Hilton hotel on a stretch of Valley Boulevard dotted with strip malls to hear Clinton’s 30-minute stump slamming Republican presidenti­al candidates. But not everyone was a lock to back her second presidenti­al bid.

Myron Dean Quon, the executive director of the nonprofit National Asian Pacific American Families Against Substance Abuse, brought his mother, Loran, 74, to the event. Quon said his parents, who live in Alhambra, voted for then-Sen. Barack Obama in 2008 but were disappoint­ed when he did not deliver on all of his campaign goals. In 2012, they voted for Mitt Romney.

Quon said he and his mother liked what they heard Thursday, praising Clinton’s pledge to increase federal funding to find a cure for Alzheimer’s and her proposal for a new tax break for people who take care of aging family members. But his mother was still skeptical of whether those ideas could become reality.

The Asian American vote should not be considered a slam-dunk for Clinton, Quon said, especially among older voters, who are taking a wait-and-see approach.

Many in the crowd were drawn to the historic nature of Clinton’s candidacy. That was the case for Margie Llorente-Gonzales, chairwoman of the Asian American & Pacific Islander Democratic Caucus in Nevada, who remembers when Clinton, then the first lady, accompanie­d President Bill Clinton on a trip to the Philippine­s in the 1990s.

“In the Philippine­s, two women have been president,” Llorente-Gonzales said. “It happened in the Philippine­s, it needs to happen here.”

Other young voters, such as University of Pennsylvan­ia freshman Cassandra Dinh, 19, of Rosemead, were considerin­g voting for Clinton’s chief rival for the Democratic nomination, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders. But Dinh said Clinton’s foreign policy experience, especially in Asia, outweighed Sanders’ progressiv­e domestic proposals. And it mattered to Dinh that Clinton was making the trip to the San Gabriel Valley to talk to Asian voters.

“This event alone is a big deal,” she said. “The fact that she is willing to come here and talk to us is a show of how open-minded she is to all minorities.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Barbara Davidson
Los Angeles Times ?? PRESIDENTI­AL HOPEFUL
Hillary Clinton at the Hilton hotel in San Gabriel, where she sought to connect with Asian Americans.
Photograph­s by Barbara Davidson Los Angeles Times PRESIDENTI­AL HOPEFUL Hillary Clinton at the Hilton hotel in San Gabriel, where she sought to connect with Asian Americans.
 ??  ?? CLINTON drew some of her strongest applause when she vowed to shorten wait times for visas.
CLINTON drew some of her strongest applause when she vowed to shorten wait times for visas.

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