Los Angeles Times

‘Tío Bernie’ gets love from Latinos

Voters cheer candidate, but one group does not: politician­s.

- By Gustavo Arellano

They showed up in Stetsons and Dodgers caps. Guayaberas and Mexican blouses. Chicano hipsters — aka “Chipsters” — and punks. Dark, light and all skin tones in between.

It was a rainbow of Latino diversity that streamed onto the Santa Ana Valley High School basketball courts Friday for a Bernie Sanders rally. “Santa Ana ‘Berns’ for you!” shouted one longhaired volunteer, eliding the A’s in the two words so it came out like “SanTana.”

The crowd of more than 4,000 people reflected one of the youngest and most Latino big cities in the United States. Sanders was here to shore up support among voters like them, a demographi­c he’ll need to win California’s Democratic presidenti­al primary on Super Tuesday, March 3.

A poll released by the Public Policy Institute of

‘When folks get to Sacramento, there’s sometimes a disconnect about what the voters are thinking.’ — LUIS ALEJO, Monterey County supervisor

California last week shows 53% of Latino voters in California plan to cast their ballot for Sanders — a number far larger than the 32% he picked up among all voters.

But one group of Latinos that Sanders isn’t counting on, so far, to take the Golden State? Big-name politician­s.

All the remaining presidenti­al hopefuls have sought the blessings of this generation of California Latino leaders because of their key role in turning the state into a blue bulwark against President Trump. A push from any of them would help raise the profile of commander-in-chief aspirants among Latinos not just in California but beyond.

Yet not a single member of the powerful Latino Legislativ­e Caucus has backed Sanders. Nor has any member of California’s Latino congressio­nal delegation or any statewide elected official. That incongruit­y has befuddled lower-level Latino politician­s across California — mayors, council members, school board trustees, county supervisor­s, even water district directors — who have actively campaigned for the Vermont senator.

“It’s interestin­g — I didn’t know that,” said 21-year-old Kingsburg Councilwom­an Jewel Hurtado. She thought about it for a bit, then continued. “It might be a smart, strategic move for them. Or maybe they’re more moderate than they say they are.”

“They [Latino Legislativ­e Caucus members] put special interests ahead of what’s best for Latinx people,” said Walter Muneton, president of the Garden Grove Unified School District board.

Monterey County Supervisor and former Latino Legislativ­e Caucus chair Luis Alejo remembers seeing Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella), his former colleague in the state Assembly, stump for Tom Steyer on television. “I texted him, and jabbed him a little bit,” Alejo said. “Like, ‘Where is this coming from?’ ”

He laughed, then sighed. “When folks get to Sacramento, there’s sometimes a disconnect about what the voters are thinking.”

The highest-ranking Latino in California to endorse Sanders is Board of Equalizati­on member Tony Vazquez (an auxiliary member of the Legislativ­e Caucus), who is listed on the Sanders website’s endorsemen­t page.

But what’s happening in California isn’t unique. Only two Latino congressio­nal representa­tives and seven Latino state legislator­s have come out for Sanders.

Far from being upset about the upper-echelon snubs, the Sanders camp is taking the developmen­t as validation of its Latino strategy: rally the rabble, and eschew the elite.

They’ve opened offices in rural and working-class cities like Oxnard, Visalia, and Fontana with huge Latino population­s but with little historical political cachet. “In most of these areas, people love Bernie,” said the campaign’s California state director, Rafael Návar. “We’re challengin­g a lot of the establishm­ent politics and the power brokers who are not working-class people — so there’s caution about that from them.”

At rallies across the state, Sanders enlists local Latino politician­s to introduce him. They, in turn, offer impassione­d speeches about how “Tío Bernie” inspired them to enter politics.

In East Los Angeles in November, it was 26-yearold Cudahy Mayor Elizabeth Alcantar. In Coachella during December, the entire City Council came out to reveal they were unanimousl­y behind him. At Fresno City College, the task fell to Hurtado, who attends the school.

“Bernie understand­s local issues — that’s where he started,” the city councilwom­an said when asked to explain why so many municipal Latino pols are with Sanders. “We are the state who is leading in liberal issues, and it’s hard to see that we don’t have more to see more support on the higher levels. But change comes from the bottom up.”

Political analysts aren’t surprised that Sanders has yet to win over the Latino ruling class.

“The repercussi­ons of endorsing someone who’s outside the Democratic mainstream has ramificati­ons for whether they’ll be included for possibilit­ies” if someone else wins the nomination, said University of Notre Dame political science professor Ricardo Ramírez. “If they do give the endorsemen­t to someone who’s asking, in his own words, for a revolution for politics, then they might be seen as outside the mainstream themselves.”

“In the eyes of this older generation of Latino electeds, he’s portrayed as someone with big ideas but can’t get anything done,” said Christian Arana, policy director for the Latino Community Foundation, a nonprofit founded to increase Latino political participat­ion in California. A November poll by the group showed that 38% of Latino voters age 18 to 39 preferred Sanders at the time, while those over 50 preferred Joe Biden.

“For younger ones, they don’t have time for the same old same old,” Arana continued. “That’s why they like Bernie. He’s the type of person who’s going to go for it. He just doesn’t care.”

Latino Legislativ­e Caucus chair Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego) gets why so many Latinos in her Assembly district and beyond favor Sanders. “Bernie lines up with their values. It makes sense. If [Massachuse­tts Sen. Elizabeth] Warren weren’t in the race, I’d support Bernie.”

Sanders joined his rivals in courting the caucus last summer and fall across the state in hotel conference rooms and labor offices, at the state Democratic convention and in restaurant basements. The candidates made half-hour pitches and took questions.

Many caucus members initially sided with California Sen. Kamala Harris, who started with strong support. Her dropping out of the presidenti­al race left “a lot of people shell-shocked,” said Gonzalez, and they then went with whom the politicos thought had the best chance of beating Trump.

“We probably, more than our constituen­ts, have a more up-close look at the candidates,” Gonzalez said. “Our access to the informatio­n is just at a different level.”

She said Sanders “did a good job” in his interview. One moment, however, stayed with her: Sanders suggested that they should talk with so-called Dreamers, as if he had discovered a new constituen­cy.

“We’re like, ‘Um, they’re our family and friends and constituen­ts,’ ” Gonzalez said. “He didn’t realize where we live and operate.”

But the Santa Ana rally suggested the Sanders team gets California Latinos more than ever.

The last time Sanders campaigned in Orange County, in 2016, it was at the since-closed Irvine Meadows Amphitheat­re. This time, it was in Valley High, a school deep in the barrio.

Democratic Party of Orange County chair Ada Briceño drew roars when she called everyone santaneros, the Spanish demonym for Santa Ana residents. Sanders promised “profound changes” to immigratio­n reform but otherwise didn’t make any explicit nods to Latinos.

Not a single Latino politician was onstage.

It didn’t matter to attendees.

“Latino voters don’t care,” said Hairo Cortes, executive director of Santa Ana-based nonprofit Chispa. “Elected Latinos, let’s be real, are just as beholden to corporate interests as other politician­s.”

Santa Ana resident Maria Ruvalcaba, 28, who walked to the Sanders event from her home, was more forgiving.

“They’re like our tías, who are, like, ‘Ese viejito, que es no tanto’ [That old man, he ain’t much],” she said. “But they learn once you talk to them about Bernie. They’re not dumb.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? SEN. BERNIE SANDERS greets supporters after speaking to more than 4,000 at Valley High School in Santa Ana on Friday. A recent poll showed 53% of Latino voters in California plan to vote for Sanders.
Photograph­s by Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times SEN. BERNIE SANDERS greets supporters after speaking to more than 4,000 at Valley High School in Santa Ana on Friday. A recent poll showed 53% of Latino voters in California plan to vote for Sanders.
 ??  ?? SANDERS is popular with Latino voters, but prominent Latino politician­s have shunned him. Endorsemen­ts have come from mayors and city councils.
SANDERS is popular with Latino voters, but prominent Latino politician­s have shunned him. Endorsemen­ts have come from mayors and city councils.
 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? JOSELINE GARCIA, a student organizer manager for Bernie Sanders, speaks at a rally Friday in Santa Ana.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times JOSELINE GARCIA, a student organizer manager for Bernie Sanders, speaks at a rally Friday in Santa Ana.

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