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Grassroots Efforts Key to Recruiting Latino Voters in California
Contributed by Administrator   
Wednesday, 02 July 2008

from New America Media:

Editor’s Note: Latino voters heavily supported Hilary Clinton during the primary in California. Now it’s up to grassroots effort of mostly bilingual volunteers to get Latino voters to support Barack Obama, reports New America Media’s Amanda Martinez.

ImageSAN FRANCISCO—“The campaign is us,” said Obama’s Latino vote coordinator for California, Juan Contreras, while addressing a group of Latino democrats here at an organizing event held at the home of a fellow Latino Obama supporter. Contreras explained that California won’t see an official Obama campaign presence. “Our efforts here will be very grassroots, just like the primaries,” he said.

Volunteers will be crucial to winning over Latinos, who strongly favored Clinton through the primary process. She held a two-to-one advantage over Latino voters compared to Obama and won California’s largely Latino communities in Los Angeles, Orange County, San Diego County, and the Central Valley. Latinos make up 14 percent of California voters and 61 percent are Democrats.

The recruitment of Clinton supporters will rely heavily on bilingual volunteers who can take the lead in introducing Latino communities to Obama. While campaigning during the primaries, Contreras found out that it wasn’t that Latinos didn’t like Obama, but that they didn’t know him and most were surprised that the policy differences between Clinton and Obama are not that different. “What we need to do is reach out to our friends and family and introduce Barack.”

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 02 July 2008 )
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L.A. Judge OKs Cops' not Asking Crime Victims, Witnesses About Immigration Status
Contributed by Administrator   
Monday, 30 June 2008

By Kenneth Kim, New America Media
Posted on June 29, 2008, Printed on June 30, 2008
http://www.alternet.org/story/89754/

ImageA Los Angeles judge yesterday dismissed a lawsuit seeking to overturn a 30-year-old policy that prohibits Los Angeles Police Department officers from asking people about their immigration status.

Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Rolf M. Treu threw out the lawsuit filed by an L.A. resident by granting a motion from the city of Los Angeles and the American Civil Liberty Union. He ruled that the Los Angeles Police Department's current policy is constitutional and doesn't hinder the local police's ability to exchange information with federal immigration officials.

"Every police chief since Chief (Daryl) Gates has supported Special Order 40," Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said in response to the judge's ruling. "They do because it makes sense. We want people to come forward, to be able when they're witnesses or victims of crimes to cooperate with the police department."

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Behind The Veil: America's Anti-Immigration Network
Contributed by Administrator   
Wednesday, 25 June 2008

Neat little video produced by the NCLR site We Can Stop The Hate :

 
Minutemen leader laments path of anti-illegal immigration groups
Contributed by Administrator   
Friday, 27 June 2008

Founder of Minuteman Project said he worries about people instigating violence in connection with his group's name.
By AMY TAXIN
The Orange County Register
Wednesday, June 25, 2008
http://www.ocregister.com/ocregister/homepage/abox/article_2076833.php

Minutemen: maybe not such a good idea after all...When Jim Gilchrist headed to the U.S.-Mexico border three years ago to press for tougher immigration enforcement, he carried binoculars.

Today, Gilchrist is worried that a few self-proclaimed patriots might be carrying a gun.

After seeing online videos that encouraged border violence amid calls to crack down on illegal immigration, the 59-year-old Aliso Viejo resident said he feels responsible for what started out as a publicity campaign and has since fallen prey to internal divisions and to influence by people he believed had "Saddam Hussein mentalities."

"In retrospect, had I seen this, had I had a crystal ball to see what is going to happen… Am I happy? No," Gilchrist said in a phone conversation late last week. "Am I happy at the outcome of this whole movement? I am very, very sad, very disappointed."

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IMMIGRATION RAIDS AND DETENTIONS: SEN. MENENDEZ MAKES MAJOR SPEECH ON SENATE FLOOR
Contributed by Tony Cheek   
Sunday, 15 June 2008
U.S. citizens and permanent residents have been swept up in raids and detentions as fears among Hispanic, other minority communities rise WASHINGTON – This afternoon, U.S. Senator Robert Menendez (D-NJ) took to the floor of the Senate to deliver a major speech on immigration raids and detentions. He cited the numerous incidences of American citizens and legal permanent residents of Hispanic or other minority descent getting swept up in raids and the fear this has engendered in minority communities. Senator Menendez, who is the Senate sponsor of legislation to ensure basic medical care for detainees, also announced that he will be introducing legislation to prevent the unlawful detention of American citizens and permanent residents. “The legitimate desire to get control over our borders has too often turned into a witch-hunt against Hispanic Americans and other people of color,” said Senator Menendez. American citizens “are targeted because of their race, targeted because of their color--denied every fundamental right guaranteed by the United States Constitution. Common sense repeatedly loses out to hysteria, and agents of intolerance repeatedly jump over the legal protections to which every single American is entitled.”

Senator Menendez' statement follows the break.

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Latino leader wins honor
Contributed by Administrator   
Sunday, 15 June 2008

from the News Observer.com:

DURHAM - Andrea Bazán, president of the Triangle Community Foundation, has been named as one of the 101 most influential Latino leaders in the United States by Latino Leaders magazine.

Bazán shares the spotlight with New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, author Isabel Allende, actress Jennifer Lopez and musician Carlos Santana among many others.

The foundation manages nearly 700 funds, ranging in size from $10,000 to $10 million, primarily for the benefit of Wake, Durham, Orange and Chatham counties in North Carolina. It gave out more than $13 million in grants last year.

 

 
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