CAN DREAMS COME TRUE?

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

photo source AP

If you can look a poor child in the eye and tell her that she can’t attend the college of her choice — a university to which her hard work and exceptional grades earned her admission — then you might believe that immigration reform is not the answer.

But, if you experience what I do each day, then you would quickly recognize the need for relief for undocumented students.

The sooner, the better.

I encounter many undocumented students in my role as chairman of the LEAP Academy Charter School in the impoverished city of Camden, New Jersey. Our school sets high goals for students from pre-K through high school and makes strong academic demands, all in the name of helping each child achieve college placement and study for more than just a job, but a career of their own making. For these kids, education represents a chance to emerge from a culture of poverty into a career of their dreams.

Unfortunately there are restrictions on the dreams of undocumented students, roadblocks that may compromise their true potential.

I had the difficult conversation with an undocumented student — to tell her that the Ivy League school to which she was admitted will not offer a financial aid package because she is not a legal U.S. resident.

Despite bipartisan support, the proposed DREAM Act was handed a setback this week, turning the focus back onto how to deal with the issue of children of illegal immigrants. (DreamActivist / Flickr.com)

That student eventually went to college — a state university, though, not an Ivy League institution. Her tuition and board was paid for with private scholarship money, not federal aid. That student has been admitted to graduate medical school and again is confronted with the same challenge.

It is unfair. Yet it is fixable.

Could an Ivy League education improve that student’s life and career outlook significantly?

Sadly, we’ll never find out.

The most difficult challenge that college-ready undocumented students confront is restricted access to financial support for college tuition. In addition to employment restrictions, they are ineligible for federal and state aid and have limited scholarship opportunities.

The DREAM (Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors) Act — which would increase the financial resources available to undocumented students — remains in limbo despite support from President Obama, members of his Cabinet, the business community and organized labor. Presidents and Chancellors at more than 73 colleges and universities across the U.S. have also voiced enthusiastic support for the bill.

The DREAM Act, if passed, could grant as many as 2.1 million students access to legal residency and limited forms of federal financial aid. Its passage is the most important political issue for the more than 48 million Latinos living in this country.

Our undocumented student did not choose to violate the law. In so many cases, students like her were brought to the U.S. as babies by their parents. In almost every case, these students love the United States — the only country they have ever really known — as much as any of us.

Denying opportunities to the children of undocumented immigrants creates a bitter and disenchanted group of young people who are unable to take advantage of the vehicles that would allow them to contribute to our economy and society.

The DREAM Act needs to be reintroduced, passed and implemented without delay. Preferably before I have to look another promising student in the eye to tell her that her immigration status is the reason her Ivy League dreams are being denied.

Read More: The Huffington Post

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ROMNEY WINS PUERTO RICO’S GOP PRIMARY

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

Romney handily wins Puerto Rico‘s GOP primary

Mitt Romney heads in to Illinois’s presidential primary this week with a handy win in Puerto Rico, pocketing the territory’s 20 GOP delegates in a bruising race that has become a numbers game for the Republican nomination.

With about 83% of total ballots accounted for early Monday in Puerto Rico, Romney had garnered more than 98,000 votes — or 83% of the total — based on unofficial results obtained from local party and election officials.

Rick Santorum was a distant second, at 8% with slightly more than 9,500 votes.

The other two candidates, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and Texas Rep. Ron Paul, were barely registered in the race with 2,431 votes, or 2% of the vote, and 1,452 votes, or 1%, respectively.

Even as the vote was being counted in Puerto Rico, Romney, Santorum and the other candidates were already on the mainland vying for delegates in Illinois and Louisiana.

Illinois holds its primary on Tuesday and Louisiana on Saturday.

CNN’s latest delegate estimates show Romney with 518 delegates to Santorum’s 239. Gingrich has 139 delegates, and Paul, the libertarian champion, has 69 delegates. To secure the nomination, 1,144 delegates are needed.

Santorum, the former Pennsylvania senator, was in Louisiana late Sunday, where he is expected to win the primary.

Romney was in Illinois where polls indicate he holds a small lead over Santorum, with Gingrich and Paul well behind.

Romney framed his win in Puerto Rico as the territory’s desire for a candidate that “most represents their feelings” — and especially their desire to nominate some who can bring about a stronger economy and a smaller government.

He also said his party can appeal to Latinos, and win the presidency, with a low-tax, pro-business message.

“Those people who don’t think that Latinos will vote for a Republican need to take a look in Puerto Rico,” said the former Massachusetts governor, noting that the territory’s governor and its legislative leaders are conservative.

photo AP

“Hispanic voters are going to vote for Republicans if we stand for something — conservative principles that bring growth and good jobs and rising home values. That’s how we’re going to win, and we’re going to get Latino voters to help us out.”

Romney had entered the contest in Puerto Rico as the favorite. He was largely backed by the island government’s political establishment, including Gov. Luis Fortuno, who campaigned with Romney last week.

Santorum, the former Pennsylvania senator, created a small political firestorm on the island in the days leading up to the primary when he said English should be the principal language in Puerto Rico before it could gain statehood. Puerto Rico will vote on a statehood referendum in November.

After arriving in Puerto Rico on Friday, Romney said he would have “no preconditions” on language for Puerto Rico to gain statehood, though during a CNN debate in January he said English should be the nation’s official language.

Santorum immediately hit back, accusing Romney of flip-flopping.

Romney fired back that English has been the official language of the government in Puerto Rico for more than 100 years.

The heated, see-saw allegations between the two candidates have marked much of the race for the GOP nomination, which Sen. John McCain, R-Arizona, called “the nastiest I’ve ever seen” during an appearance Sunday on NBC’s “Meet The Press.”

Puerto Rico’s primary came two days before the showdown in Illinois, where 54 delegates will be awarded proportionally and polls show a tight race between Romney and Santorum.

Asked over the weekend while campaigning in Missouri about whether a win in Illinois would mean he’d win the nomination, Santorum said: “We feel very, very good about it. Let’s put it that way. Really good about it.”

Santorum also challenged Romney’s assertion that his business experience is one of his strongest credentials, telling CNN’s Candy Crowley on “State of the Union” on Sunday that, “If Gov. Romney thinks that he is the CEO of America and can run and manage the economy, he doesn’t understand what conservatives believe in.”

Romney’s campaign released an ad in Illinois on Friday, attacking Santorum for having “never run a business or a state.”

Santorum on Sunday said he had experience in the private sector as a lawyer, but argued that executive experience at a company is not necessary to be commander-in-chief.

“Running a business is not the same as being president of the United States,” he said.

Santorum also gave no indication that he has plans to drop out of the race should his campaign reach a point where the delegate math doesn’t add up in his favor.

“What I’m hearing is that we want a conservative nominee, that the establishment is trying to push a moderate like they did in 1976 against Ronald Reagan, like they did in 1996 with Bob Dole and what they did with John McCain,” Santorum said. “I think conservatives would like an opportunity to nominate a conservative, and that’s an opportunity.”

Both Santorum and Romney also focused their rhetoric at President Barack Obama, particularly with regard to rising gas prices.

Romney said Obama needed to fire Secretary of Energy Steven Chu and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar for their role in driving up gas prices.

“Given the fact that (Obama has) changed his policies, wants lower gas prices, he needs to fire them and return to the energy policies we need,” Romney said during a town hall meeting in Collinsville, Illinois.

Santorum told a crowd in Effingham, Illinois, to remember Obama at the gas pumps.

“When you see that zero come up, when it gets to the $100 range, when you see the zero, think of ‘O’ for Obama because that’s why you are paying that extra amount of money,” Santorum said.

READ MORE: CNN NEWS

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WILL TEXAS PLAY A ROLE FOR GOP CANDIDATES?

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

Speaking to the RJC, the candidates all promised to strengthen the alliance with Israel. | AP Photos

With the Texas primary still more than two months away, and no assurances that the GOP presidential nominating process will have been decided by then, folks in the Lone Star State are anxiously preparing for company.

Some state officials are bemoaning the fact that Texas elections have been delayed until May 29 because of redistricting court battles, forcing the state to miss March’s much-heralded “Super Tuesday,” when 10 other states participated in primaries and caucuses.

The concern was that the nation’s second-largest state would have no real say in choosing the next Republican nominee for president.

But after Rick Santorum chalked up wins in Alabama and Mississippi last week, although still greatly trailing front-runner Mitt Romney in the delegate count, there is a feeling among many party faithful and political pundits that the momentum is with him. “True conservatives” are giddy about the prospect of Santorum winning enough races between now and June to cause a brokered convention in August.

The trail to the convention would become more interesting in Texas, where Republicans are armed with the second-most delegates in the country (155). Even Californians, whose primary is in June, are holding out hope that their 172 delegates will be the ones to really decide the nominee to face President Barack Obama in the general election.

If there truly is a contested campaign in this state, it could have ramifications for others on the ballot as the GOP old guard battles Tea Party upstarts. And depending how much money the candidates and their supporting super political action committees spend on advertising, it could get dirty real quick.

Former first lady Barbara Bush, a Romney supporter, is on record voicing her disgust with this year’s campaign.

“I think it’s been the worst campaign I’ve ever seen in my life,” Bush said during an appearance this month with daughter-in-law Laura at Southern Methodist University.

Intra-party battle lines have been drawn for a while as the elder Bushes and other GOP heavyweights backed Romney, and Gov. Rick Perry, after a failed presidential bid, threw his staunch support behind Newt Gingrich.

That leaves Santorum — with his growing Tea Party, social conservative and evangelical support — and Rep. Ron Paul, who has a following of Libertarians and other big-government haters.

A new poll out last week by Wilson Perkins Allen Opinion Research, a GOP survey group, showed Santorum ahead of Romney in Texas by 8 percentage points, 35 percent to 27 percent, followed by Gingrich with 20 percent and Paul with 8 percent.

Should Santorum hang on to that lead, who knows what impact his voters will have on down-ballot races — statewide, congressional and legislative and even county elections.

A lot will depend on who can get their message and their voters out. This is not Kansas or Mississippi.

Texas has 20 media markets, including the fifth- and 10th-largest in the country (Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston, respectively). That means candidates will have to spend a lot of money on advertising and a lot of face-time in the state.

And, based on what we’ve seen in other primary and caucus states, it’s sure to get downright nasty.

The candidates, however, will try to balance their mean streaks with their softer personas demonstrated by imitating local accents, holding babies and eating down-home food like grits, biscuits and barbecue. Of course, in Texas they’ll have to add tamales to that list — and I trust none will eat the Mexican staple with corn husk still on it.

After the Alabama and Mississippi contests, The Associated Press tabulated the delegate count at 495 for Romney, 252 for Santorum, 131 for Gingrich and 48 for Paul. It takes 1,144 to win.

Because Gingrich and Santorum have vowed to take their campaigns all the way to the convention in Florida regardless of delegate count, Texans can expect to see quite a bit of the candidates here in the next few weeks.

So, get out the welcome mats, y’all. While you’re at it, you might want to stock up on some bicarbonate of soda.

Read more here: Star-Telegram

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DOES VOTER TURNOUT AMONG HISPANICS DECREASE AFTER STRICT VOTER ID LAWS?

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

Analyzing Minority Turnout After Voter ID

Minnesota currently has a proposed constitutional amendment moving through its legislature to impose strict photo ID restrictions on voters and possibly eliminate Election Day registration. I take great pride in the fact that my home state of Minnesota consistently has the highest turnout in the country, and I’m pained by this legislation that is sure to reduce opportunities for voter participation across the state.

I want to correct a common misperception that came up during show, suggesting that voter turnout among Hispanic voters in Georgia has increased since the passage of its restrictive no-photo, no-vote photo ID law.

Motivation for voter turnout is notoriously difficult to measure. It’s a moving target, not lending itself easily to empirical methods of evaluation. But in this case, any assertion that voter turnout among Hispanics increased in Georgia following enactment of its strict voter ID law is simply not true.

According to the GA Secretary of State,Georgia’s Hispanic turnout (calculated as a percentage of registered voters) was lower in 2010 than in 2006, and it was lower in 2008 than in 2004. See table below:

Registered Hispanic Voters Actual Hispanic Voters Hispanic Turnout %
2004 30,148 18,240 60.5%
2006 43,514 11,601 26.7%
2008 73,375 43,717 59.6%
2010 75,658 19,320 25.5%

The number of Hispanic voters was greater in the 2010 election than in the 2006 election, and in the 2008 election than in the 2004 election, as the total population of registered Hispanic voters increased by 73.9 percent and 144 percent, respectively. However, there was a slight reduction in the percentage of voter turnout for Hispanics between presidential election years 2004 and 2008 and non-presidential election years 2006 and 2010.

While simple turnout numbers from a single state cannot tell us exactly what impact new voter restrictions have on voter turnout, it’s clear that in Georgia, the percentage of minority voter turnout has not increased following enactment of its strict voter ID law.

Strict voter ID laws are absolutely the wrong policy direction for this country. Voter participation rates across all racial, ethnic and socio-economic are dropping each election year. Georgia has seen voter participation rates in the fastest growing ethnic population over the past decade stay flat or decline.  As we consider what is best for America, increased voter participation is essential to restoring faith in our democracy and strict voter ID laws that fail to solve any real problems are wrong for America.

READ MORE: http://www.brennancenter.org/blog/archives/analyzing_minority_turnout_after_voter_id/

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WHAT IS THIS COUNTRY GOING TO LOOK LIKE AFTER THIS ELECTION?

THE HISPANIC BLOG IS THE LATEST HISPANIC NEWS BY JESSICA MARIE GUTIERREZ

Congressman Raul Grijalva (D-AZ) (2010 GETTY IMAGES)

Arizona Rep. Raul Grijalva has developed a reputation as a blunt, staunch liberal since being elected to represent his state’s 7th District in 2003.

His outspokenness garnered him national headlines in 2010, when he called for an economic boycott of Arizona following the passage of SB1070, the controversial immigration law that has spurred a lawsuit by the Justice Department and is set to be heard before the U.S. Supreme Court in April.

The son of a Mexican migrant worker, Grijalva is also known as one of the long-time leaders of the Latino community in the Southwest.

Fox News Latino spoke with the congressman earlier this week as he was traveling through his district.


FOX NEWS LATINO: Last week Fox News Latino released a poll in which they matched up the remaining Republican candidates against President Obama, and none of them scored above a 14 percent likely voter rating. What do you think of those results and what does that mean for the Republican field as it tries to relate to the Latino community?

Rep. Raul Grijalva: I think the Republican field all through these primaries have boxed themselves into a corner with regard to the Latino community.

They tried to out-hard each other on issues like immigration, their positions on education, their positions on the issues of jobs and opportunity – they boxed themselves into a corner.

So regardless of who wins the primaries, their deficit is obvious but it’s self-created.

It is not a deficit you’re going to gloss over by putting a Hispanic as a VP candidate, it’s not going to be glossed over by trying to mitigate the points that you’ve made because they’re going to hear that rhetoric from the Obama campaign and from us Democrats – the rhetoric and all those clips from their debates over and over and over again.

This was a conscious political calculation on the part of the Republicans and their presidential aspirations to take this line. They took it and now you’ve seen the consequences of taking that line.

FNL: What issue has resonated with the Latino community more? The Dream Act? Immigration?

Grijalva: The issue of immigration, you have to deal with that issue because it’s front and center on this whole debate.

Even for us, who are Latinos born in this country – fourth, fifth generation Latinos that have been born in this country – the issue is relevant and important because of its implications.

It deals with who you are, and that isolation of that group, politically speaking – in terms of the issue of immigration and the very, very hard rhetoric that you’ve heard on the issue and the marginalizing and criminalizing of people on that issue – people take that personally.

Whether there’s security in terms of being fourth or fifth generation in this country becomes irrelevant.

Whether you’re a Puerto Rican and automatically have citizenship; whether you’re a Cuban that touches the soil and automatically has status in this country, that does not matter because that becomes an affront and an attack on a group of people as opposed to the issue of immigration.

The issue of education is about opportunity. It is always the gateway for every immigrant group in this country. It certainly continues to be the gateway for the Latino community, so people’s position is about investing in that issue. And Obama’s effort to invest in that issue despite resistance from Congress is seen as a positive.

And the jobs issue, who’s the hardest community hit by unemployment? Who’s the hardest community hit by foreclosure? Who’s the hardest community hit by this whole economic issue? It’s been the Latino community.

So when you assess who’s saying what, and you have on the part of the Republican candidates a defense of the lending institutions, a rejection of some oversight and regulatory control over what lending institutions and Wall Street is doing, and you begin to see that door of opportunity closing.

And when you see the defunding of education, when you see a tax against Title One, which deals with the poorest children in this country and Head Start; of course you’re going to make those conclusions.

I’m so glad this is happening now in a very personal way for me, because there’s always been this cattle call mentality – and my party’s been guilty of it, too.

You put a surname up, they say this is good for you and you’re going to come vote for them.

Well, that time finally – and gratefully – is over. The ability of our community to discern between who’s on your side and who is not is highly elevated, and the immigration issue brought us to that ability to discern.

And I think that’s why [Republicans] are suffering, as a party, political consequences and huge loss of support from the 40 percent that Bush got to the merely 12 to 14 percent right now.

That is a shift, a gap, that I don’t think the rest of the presidential election is going to close, quite frankly.

FNL: You mentioned even if Republicans put a Latino like Marco Rubio on the ticket, it won’t have any effect. The rhetoric coming out of the Republican party seems to disagree with that as Rubio’s name is constantly being thrown out there as a VP candidate. Do you think his stance and comments on the Dream Act are going to affect his standing within the Latino community?

Grijalva: I think his comments on the Dream Act will.

His comments, his less than genuine comments, on his lineage and how his parents got here is not going to play well.

All of us know they were refugees, but they were already here.

As a refugee from Cuba, and as a national policy, if you touch the sand you have status and protected status in this country as a refugee.

Those are not going to hit in places where you have populations of people who are struggling to make their status permanent and legal in this country. I think that dynamic is more hurtful than his position on immigration because that’s disingenuous what he did.

He used his lineage, his cultural and racial lineage, as an advantage and it backfired on him.

Why I say that, because a surname is not going to change the dynamic and the conversations that have already been done by the Republican Party. You know there’s going to be a platform this party has to adopt and regardless of how nice and how good your Spanish is on radio and TV, there’s a platform attached to your party.

And mark my word, the issue on immigration, the issue on education, the issue on jobs, it’s going to be harsh and it’s going to be, as the community perceives it, not in their favor of opportunity and not into the favor of their family.

That will shift that discussion very much. The Latino community is thinking about the next step. That’s why when you do polling, immigration comes in number four.

There’s an urgency to that issue, but there’s also a huge urgency to the future. This particular family might not have everything thing they need to sustain themselves and have the pure American middle class dream, but they have that dream for their kids. And suddenly you’re closing the door not just on them, but on the future generation. That is a very, very powerful sentiment.

FNL: You mentioned the Latino community knows who’s on their side. What has President Obama or the Democrats done for the Latino community since he’s taken office?

Grijalva: Not enough. Not enough.

They passed the Dream Act out of the House, and three or four Democrats in the Senate kept it from getting to the desk for the President to sign it.

Comprehensive immigration reform, too. We had Democrats in the House who were so afraid of that issue they couldn’t bring themselves to support it or allow it to proceed.

That’s absolutely true. I don’t argue the point.

But I think what the Latino voter is discerning, and there’s this new ethic about discerning who’s who and who’s on your side, there is an A for effort.

And I think in terms of effort and pushing that agenda, Democrats can’t be held guilty for the effort.

Is the result what we wanted? No. But has there been an effort on the part of the Republican Party? No. Has there been obstruction on the part of the Republican Party? Yes.

Has there been an unwillingness to compromise, even on the number of visas? Has there been a willingness to compromise on the Dream Act? No.

So you get to the point where you see where is the effort and where is the push coming from and where is the resistance coming from, the distinctions are so clear. It’s an advantage for Democrats, absolutely.

FNL: Given the drop in Latino support from the Bush era that you mentioned, have Republicans done irreparable harm to their stance within the Latino community?

Grijalva: Generational, no question about that.

There’s kids growing up right now who come from a blended family where one of their parents are not fully documented to be in this country, yet they’re citizens.

There are 3.5 million of those kids running around this country right now. They’re citizens yet their full family is not fully documented.

You think that generation hasn’t learned a listen from this? You don’t think they’ve learned who was pushing for them and trying to protect them? And who was after their parents?

This is kids growing up in this generation, and everybody around them in the community has watched that experience.

So, yeah, I think it’s a generational damage to the Republican Party that it’s done to itself.

The gap with Latinos that has increased, the gap with women that has increased, has been a direct result of the Republican Party not wanting to moderate their tone, but to push into a fringe position to try to win a primary in a presidential election.

Well, that victory is hard won, but it’s also created the hard losses that they’re going to have because those two gaps are critical in this next upcoming election.

FNL: Being based in Southern Arizona, you were close to the Gabby Giffords shooting and at the time there was a lot of discussion about changing the tone in politics. Has the tone gotten better or worse?

Grijalva: It hasn’t gotten better since Gabby’s shooting, no it hasn’t.

Some of us, and I include myself in that group, did our part.

We understand that rhetoric has consequences. Rhetoric has meaning. So some people have learned to bite their tongue and turn the discussion into a debate on policy issues and try to do it with as much civility as possible, but the same saber-rattling on immigration, same saber-rattling on issues dealing with women, same saber-rattling on the President is not born in this country and therefore is illegitimate to be President of the United States (including right here in the state of Arizona) – that same saber-rattling continues.

I would suggest that would be an important step on the most divisive issues that face our society – not necessarily our body politic, but our society.

To continue that hard saber-rattling for a political wedge issue and perceived advantage (which I think is going turn into a disadvantage very quickly and it’s becoming that), you continue that rhetoric, it hasn’t gotten better.

FNL: Do you think it ever will?

Grijalva: I think there’s a lesson in 2012.

There’s a lesson about compromise, that it’s give and take, not just [take]. There’s a lesson to be learned with the American people’s frustration with Congress not doing anything.

There’s a lesson to be learned about dealing with each other on these really divisive issues in a factual, clean, hard debate.

I would love that opportunity. I would love the opportunity to not react on these issues based on my sense of having to be defensive or being protective of groups of people that I think are being picked on.

If we get to that point with issues in Congress, and I think 2012 will help define that, that it’s about getting things done for the greater good as opposed to narrowly defining our country by a very limited, either theological approach to politics or a very fringe approach to politics, I think we can get things done.

Look, what I want out of comprehensive reform I’m not going to get. But what should be done is possible.

FNL: You brought up the birther investigation by Sheriff Joe Arpaio. What are your thoughts on that and what are the rumblings you hear about that within your circles?

Grijalva: It’s Arpaio political posturing at its best.

When under siege from a grand jury, when under siege from a federal investigation, when under siege by the fact that you did not investigate 400 sex crimes (many of them on children) in area of Maricopa [County] that’s predominately Latino – hey, you’ve [got] some problems, Sheriff.

So his strategy is “Let’s take the attention away from me, and put the attention on this issue.”

A non-issue, an issue that only raises the hair of the very fringe on this whole thing – even my good, conservative Republican friends here in Tucson think it’s a stupid issue. [They say,] “We’ve got bigger fights ahead of us with you guys, with you Democrats. We have bigger fights. We’re wasting our time.”

So this kind of rhetoric, unfortunately, this kind of narrow way to look at how we should do public policy has dominated the Republican primaries.

You’ve got [Mitt] Romney and all the other candidates coming in here and basically kiss the ring for Arpaio. He endorsed [Rick] Perry here, but they all said he’s doing a great job. What’s that message across the country? Not just to Latinos but to anybody who cares about ethical law enforcement? It’s embarrassing, one, and two, he’s trying to divert attention from himself.

FNL: We’ve been talking about some big issues here, and it sounds like you believe 2012 is a major turning point for this country.

I really do. I really do.

Everybody tries to magnify the current election as the most important election that ever happened, but going into the 2012 election the American people are going to have some clear choices.

And it’s not about who’s the guy in the White House after this election, it’s about what this country is going to look like after this election.

Demographics tell us what it’s going to look like.

The body politic is going to have to catch up with that change. And I think this election is going to be about what we’re going to look like. This is a future-orientated election. This is why your questions are about Latinos and why they’re so important.

When I look at that [Fox News Latino poll], when immigration was number four it did not surprise me because this is an immigrant community that’s future-looking to their ascendancy and full integration into the society.

And it should be about the future. It should be economics, it should be about education, it should be about those issues that will move that community forward.

So, yeah, within the Latino community it’s a pivotal election, and nationwide it’s defining who this nation is in the future. That is not an exaggeration, I truly feel that and if you talk to voters they feel that, too.

Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politics/2012/03/14/q-congressman-grijalva-on-gop-rubio-immigration/#ixzz1pY4pOMce

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