A Family Weighs Democrats' Latino Credibility
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Tuesday, September 11, 2007
LAS VEGAS -- Olivia Diaz's political commentary began soon after her family settled in their cozy living room on Sunday night to watch the first presidential forum in the nation's history targeting Hispanics.
"He speaks Spanish," she whispered during the introduction of Sen. Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.). Her two sisters and their parents, who immigrated from Mexico, were enjoying being courted and uncommitted, and nodded.
But Diaz, a 28-year-old teacher, pursed her lips in disapproval when Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) defended her vote to construct a barrier at the border with Mexico. "A wall won't solve the problem," Diaz said later.
On details such as the fence, Diaz and her family agreed that the seven Democrats at the forum don't quite get it. They skimped on specifics about changing immigration law and dodged a question about why it is okay to construct a barrier at the U.S.-Mexico border but unnecessary to build one at the border with Canada.
As far as Diaz was concerned, the forum, which Nielsen Media Research said was watched by 4.6 million people, most of them Hispanics, produced no clear winner. She and her family want a candidate who can beat the Republicans, whom they don't think understand their problems, but Sunday night did not settle it. And Diaz knows their opinions matter more than ever, because while the forum was in Miami, a major new front in the battle for Latino voters is in Nevada.
The combination of a change to the primary calendar that moved up the state's Democratic caucus to Jan. 19 and the fast growth of the state's Hispanic community -- it has increased by 209,000 since 2000 -- has made families such as the Diazes highly sought after.
Latinos make up one-quarter of Nevada's population and about 13 percent of its voters, according to a study by Brookings Institution demographer William H. Frey, and could help push the state, which President Bush carried by only 21,000 votes in 2004, into the Democratic column in 2008.
Although New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson is the only Latino in the race -- and he loudly protested Sunday that he was not allowed to answer questions in Spanish -- he has not won over the Diaz family.
Over the weekend, Diaz was in the small crowd when Richardson opened a campaign office a few blocks from her home in the Hispanic heart of the city. She clapped politely but didn't put a campaign sticker on her shirt. Richardson is at least the fourth candidate to come to her neighborhood this summer.
Her decision will probably influence her family. Her mother, Alejandra Diaz, is 52 and a housewife. She immigrated to Las Vegas 34 years ago from a small farming village called La Candela in Durango, Mexico, following her husband, Gilberto. Alejandra speaks little English, but both she and Gilberto, 60, became citizens in the late 1990s. He works nights, cleaning the casino at Caesars Palace, and is a member of the 60,000-member Culinary Workers Union, which is heavily courted by Democrats.
Neither of Olivia's parents have high school diplomas, but they have voted in every presidential election since they became citizens.
"It was silly to wait so many years," said Gilberto Diaz, who legally immigrated to Lincoln, Calif., with his parents in 1965. "The doors are open when you are a citizen, and we wanted to be involved in the system, to be able to vote. It's the only way for Latinos to show that we have force."



