http://www.russstewart.com/1-5-05.htmFor those of you unfamiliar with Russ Stewart, he is one of the best political columnists on Illinois and Chicago politics, if not the best. He writes a weekly article about Illinois and Chicago politics and it is usually available by Wednesday afternoon. This week's article is very interesting about how Hispanics vote (or don't vote in some cases). It is interesting because they are culturally conservative but economically liberal.
Here are the first three paragraphs:
Political power results from votes, not potential. That's why, at least locally, "Hispanic political power" is an oxymoron, and it does not yet exist in Chicago and Illinois, even though it exists elsewhere in the nation.
According to the 2000 census, Hispanics are America's major minority, as the U.S. Hispanic population nearly doubled between 1990 and 2000, due to both immigration and high birth rates. Nationwide, Hispanics now number 37.6 million, while blacks number 36.1 million. During that period, Hispanics grew from 19.6 percent to 26 percent of the population in Chicago, from 13.5 percent to 19.9 percent in Cook County and from 2.9 percent to 12.3 percent in the state.
The expanding areas of Hispanic growth in Chicago are Albany Park, Cragin and Logan Square on the Northwest Side, South Lawndale on the West Side, Archer Heights and West Lawn near Midway Airport on the Southwest Side, and the area near Hegewisch on the Far Southeast Side. In the Cook County suburbs, Cicero, Melrose Park, Berwyn and Stone Park have experienced explosive Hispanic population growth, as have Aurora, Waukegan, Elgin, Wood Dale, Addison and Bensenville in the Collar Counties."
This paragraph highlights the conservative values that Hispanics have:
"However, according to a survey of 600 registered Hispanic voters in Cook County conducted from Nov. 20 to 22 by McCulloch Research and Polling, with a margin of error of 3.8 percent, the Republicans have no cause for gloom. On cultural and fiscal issues, the respondents are notably conservative: 67.2 percent oppose gay marriage, 43.5 percent oppose abortion in any circumstance (while 36.8 percent support it), 57 percent back school vouchers that would give a tax credit to parents who send their children to private schools, 70 percent support the death penalty for capital crimes, 49 percent favor the Bush Administration's immigration plan to allow "illegal aliens" to stay in America for a limited period, and 60.2 percent feel that their federal, state and county taxes are "too high."
I find it interesting that 70% support the death penalty. As a fellow Catholic, I find it odd that the number is that high. Anyway, the following paragraph shows how liberal they are when it comes to economic policy and really shows that Illinois Democrats need to stick to bread and butter issues to maintain/grow upon the Hispanic vote. It's a short read with a great amount of insight.