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In honor of Love and Friendship

by the El Reportero’s staff

In celebration of St. Valentine’s Day, artist Marta Ayala brings her most finest art works to Excelsior District’s Mamá Art Café in her Recuerdos, Huellas, y Amistad paintings Marta Ayala’s history with Mamá began during the first months of operation when she painted a vibrant mural depicting the landscape and cultural elements of Central America. Other murals by Ayala can be found in the infamous Balmy Alley and at the corner of Mission & Excelsior, among other locations in the Bay Area. Stone, Water, Wind, an exhibition of her paintings, was the first show to grace the walls at Mamá Art Cafe in 2004.

In her recent work, you will find textiles, feathers, buttons, and dried plants as well as her own handprints, adding a tactile and three dimensional aspect to her canvases.

Ayala says of her own work “My vision is called primitive because the vivid colors and naive representations call forth ancient emotions. They are a vibrant and powerful affirmation of life.” t 4754 Mission St., S.F. Currently on view through February 28.

22nd Solo Mujeres Annual Exhibition

Enjoy “Future Landscapes Designed by Women.” It expresses how women envision our times yet to come, what landscapes are women designing and how women see themselves in these times of change. The exhibition will feature: installations, paintings, sculpture, mixed media, fi ber art and video.

The Solo Mujeres Exhibition at MCCLA has been serving Latina women artists for the last 22 years.

On February 20 – March 27, 2009. Reception: February 20, 7-10 p.m. $5. At MC-CLA Galleries 2868 Mission Street, San Francisco CA 94110 (415) 821-1155. Located 1/2 a block from the 24th St. BART Station / Muni: 14, 14L, 48, 49 & 67. MCCLA is wheelchair accessible.

Also at MCCLA, a special events related to Solo Mujeres.

Cineastas de Granada, are a series of films by Nicaraguan women. The pro­gram will include short films by the students of Cineastas de Granada followed by the award winning documentary De Niña a Madre, by Florence Jaugey. On March 5, 2009 7 p.m. $5-10 MCCLA Theater.

Leonardo da Vinci highlights Chabot’s Spring Community Education Program

(Hayward, CA) – After being gone nearly 500 years, Leonardo da Vinci will return to join Chabot College’s Community Education Program on Friday, February 20, from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. to regal visitors with his scientific and artistic genius. Well, not the real Leonardo but a pretty close match. In full costume and character, instructor Jim Wiltens, a self-described “human-profi ler,” will lead an interactive and entertaining part-theater, part-lecture evening, highlighting the program’s spring semester.

Though Leonardo is a hard act to follow, the program spring line-up continues offering more exciting non-credit courses throughout the spring with nearly 100 classes for adults, teens and children.

To find more details on all classes and to register, go to www.chabotcollege.edu come or call Judy at (510) 723-6665.

Three Latinos nominated for Oscars

by Antonio Mejías-Rentas

Penelope CruzPenelope Cruz

UP FOR OSCARS: Three Latinos were among Academy Award nominees announced last week in Los Angeles Most prominent of the three is Spanish actress Penelope Cruz, nominated in the best supporting actress category for her performance in Vicky Cristina Barcelona. In the English language film, Cruz speaks some Spanish.

She was nominated in the best actress category two years ago for her Spanish language performance in Pedro Almodóvar’s Volver. T he two other nominees were born in Latin America but raised and educated in Los Angeles One is Chile-born cinematographer Claudio Miranda for his work in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. This is the first nomination for Miranda, who was born in Santiago but left his country as a child.

The other is Mike Elizalde, who shares a nomination with Thom Floutz in the makoup category for Hellboy II. Elizalde was born in Mazatlán, Mexico, but migrated with his family as a child. He is a frequent collaboration with Hellboy director Guillermo del Toro.

Winners will be announced Feb. 22 in Los Angeles.

L.A. SAYS ‘BIENVENIDO’: Gustavo Dudamel, the 28-year-old star conductor from Venezuela set to take the reins of one of the nation’s top orchestras, announced his first season with the Los Angeles Philharmonic last week.

The orchestra’s 2009-10 season will launch in October with a free concert at the Hollywood Bowl titled Bienvenido Gustavol followed by an inaugural gala at Los ­Angeles’ Walt Disney Concert Hall to be broadcast live around the world (and a week later in the U.S, on PBS’ Great Performances. “ The Dude”—as L A. media sometimes identify him—will conduct Beethoven and Mahler pieces at those concerts. The season includes a festival dedicated to music of the Americas.

The season also includes an eight-city U.S. tour with the Los Angeles Philharmonic in March and April.

‘CORRIDO’ FOR OBAMA: A Los Angeles musician says he is recording English and Spanish language versions of a folk song he wrote for the 44th President.

Juan Carlos Sánchez, an undocumented immigrant who goes by the artistic name of Sinaloa 21, says he composed his corrido inspired by the election of Barack Obama.

In the song, he urges the new president to move forward with pro-immigrant policies. Sanchez, an undocumented immigrant, is a maintenance worker in Los Angeles. The Obama corrido has received thousands of hits on youtube. His dream, he says, is to perform it in the White House. Hispanic Link.

Calls on U.S. Attorney General to reverse Mukasey decision, affi rm support for immigrants’ legal rights

by the El Reportero’s staff

WASHINGTON, DC – Today, the American Immigration Law Foundation (AILF) is joined by more than 130 immigrants’ rights organizations, law firms, and lawyers from across the country in calling for Attorney General Eric Holder to reverse a last-minute legal decision issued by outgoing Attorney General Michael Mukasey.

Mukasey’s legal opinion unraveled decades of precedent guaranteeing due process to people facing life-changing consequences – namely, deportation.

AILF is submitting a letter to Attorney General Holder asking him to vacate and reconsider Mukasey’s legal opinion in Matter of Compean, 24 I & N Dec. 710 (A.G. 2009).

In that decision, Mukasey declared that there is no legal or constitutional right to a lawyer in removal proceedings, therefore, people have no right to complain or request a new hearing when their lawyer is incompetent. For decades, the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) and most federal courts have operated under the principle that people DO have such rights.

Bayer to launch $20-ad campaign to correct misleading information

After running a deceptive campaign about oral contraceptive, Bayer Corporation was required to pay for its mistake by running a campaign to correct the misleading assertions.

The Attorney General’s Office obligated the company to spend $20 million publically to correct it.

According to an Attorney General’ statement, Bayer’s deceptive ad campaign led young women to believe that its oral contraceptive would cure symptoms for which it was not approved for use,” Attorney General Brown said. “This judgment modification forces the company to stop making those claims and spend $20 million correcting misleading assertions about the product.”

Bayer claimed the drug could treat symptoms related to premenstrual syndrome (PMS), and acne, in addition to anxiety, tension, irritability, moodiness, fatigue, headaches, and muscle aches. None of these claims have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

Stanford to open a new outpatient facility

Stanford is opening a stunning new outpatient center in Redwood City on February 17.

The new facility will house its dermatology, sleep, orthopedics, digestive health, pain management and imaging programs. Stanford has taken every step to ensure the top of the line patient care Stanford is known in a healing environment convenient to patients in the peninsula, East Bay, South Bay and San Francisco, according a written statement.

In addition to the leading edge technology and Stanford physicians, this new facility boasts superior patient service with kiosks helping patients in multiple languages, a complimentary business center, free parking and easy access to public transit – and most critically – an ability to take care of all of your medical needs in one spot. Some of the incredible physicians associated include medical director of Stanford’s famed Sleep Clinic, Clete Kushida, MD and Ortho legend William Maloney, MD.

The opening of Redwood City, is really just the beginning of the new Stanford Medicine. They have purchased an additional 35 acres in Redwood City, which will become their North Campus and as you know in 2011 will break ground on an entirely new hospital in Palo Alto. ­http://outpatient.stanfordhospital.com/.

New reality confronts Latinos’ college aspirations

by Edwin Mora

[First of two parts]

The nation’s ongoing economic turbulence will further hinder many Latino students’ capacity to afford college by advancing the decline of their family’s household income and diminishing student lending options.

That’s the word of Antonio Flores, president and CEO of the Hispanic Association of Colleges and Universities.

“The crisis is going to have a very detrimental effect on the ability of Latino families to pay for college. The impact can be very widespread and very long-lasting, depending on how long the economic crisis continues without light at the end of the tunnel,” pumping the word “very” all three times.

It’s HACU’s mission to improve the quality of higher education institutions by making them more inclusive and accessible to Latino students.

A study released in October by the Higher Education Research Institute at University of California-Los Angeles’ Graduate School of Education and Information Studies covers household income of Latino students.

Its research shows a growing discrepancy between household incomes of Latino and non-Latino students at four-year colleges and universities over the past 30 years. The income difference skyrocketed from $7,986 in 1975 to $32,965 in 2006.

With the economy in shambles, the financial state of Hispanic students isn’t likely to get any better.

A recent report by the Economic Policy Institute reveals that the Hispanic workforce is prone to face tougher financial challenges than other workers due to the downturn. This is largely because Latinos’ finances did not improve during the latest recovery period. They were, not surprisingly, worse than when the recession began.

“It’s disturbing that the Latino household income will continue to shrink as a result of the economic crisis,” says Flores.

The economic status of the average Latino household fuels the financial aid dependency exhibited by many Hispanic college students.

Financial aid was a top priority when Latino freshman were considering a four-year college or university, according to the UCLA study.

“About 82 percent of our Latino students do apply for financial aid,” says Raúl Lerma, financial aid director for University of Texas-El Paso (UTEP). “We have definitely seen more students asking for the maximum aid amount this year.”

According to the UCLA report, 20 percent of Hispanic freshmen identified as a major problem their capacity to afford college. That contrasts to 8.6 percent of non-Hispanic freshman in 2006.

Latinos make up about 75 percent of UTEP’s student body, according to Lerma.

This university is one of the lower-cost schools in the University of Texas system, charging about $2,900 in tuition fees for 15 undergraduate credit hours.

The Pew Hispanic Center reveals that more than half of Latino college students are enrolled in Texas and California institutions. Next: College funding options are reduced.

(Edwin Mora is a reporter with Hispanic Link News Service in Washington, D.C. E-mail: ­emora83@gmail.com). ©2009

L.A. Times, anti-immigrant group on same old dance card

by José de la Isla

José de la IslaJosé de la Isla

HOUSTON – Oh boy, did The Los Angeles Times pull a doozy.

On Feb. 2 they carried an innocuous looking screed by Ira Mehlman. In it he excoriated, without naming it, the National Hispanic Leadership Agenda, a group of 26 top Latino organizations. More than three months ago, they put immigration at the top of their reform priorities to press on the new Obama administration.

Mehlman thought NHLA should have used instead the priorities from a Pew Hispanic Center study based on public-opinion polling.

There is no confusing the 26 groups making up the NHLA. They have a long history advising presidential candidates and administrations. John Trasvina, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, heads the group.

The Pew Hispanic Center, in Washington, D.C., produces research but takes no position nor makes recommendations based on their findings.

And Ira Mehlman is simply listed as the Los Angeles office media director of the Federation for Immigration Reform, or FAIR.

For those who don’t know, FAIR was founded by and is “part of a network of groups created by a man who has been at the heart of the white nationalist movement for decades,” according to the Southern Poverty Law Center website, announcing the release of a new report, “The Nativist Lobby: Three Faces of Intolerance.”

SPLC is a reputable organization that has been fi ghting and exposing extremist groups since the civil rights struggle.

FAIR is hardly in the same category as NHLA or Pew or SPLC, nor is it a reliable (forget sensible) source to tell the Latino community what’s best for it.

The right for FAIR to have its ludicrous viewpoint is its business. But regurgitating old and settled issues, criticism and bitter discussion to stimulate controversy over a closed matter in a public forum is something to ponder about this kind of agit-prop, to borrow a term from George Orwell.

Clearly we need to turn to a new page in discussing immigration. It is self-evident from a study, released in January, by The Americas Majority Foundation.

It definitively shows that in 90 competitive House races of 2008, where immigration was used as an issue, candidates with less restrictive positions did much better than those who favored more restrictive ways. “[I]mmigration was a wedge issue benefiting the Democratic Party, but not the G.O.P.,” said their report.

So the public has already settled the matter, and all that remains to be done is to start coming up with perspective and good proposals about what to do next.

The other guys lost. We don’t have to replay their exaggerations and lies, unless of course newspaper editors never read their own papers.

That’s why there’s no need to regress back to the hours following the election more than three months ago to grouse about the people’s choice. It’s almost like arguing that John McCain really did win the election. No he didn’t. And FAIR’s perspective lost decisively. Period.

Instead, there is a public need to provide a forum for those who do have something to offer. Instead, “immigration” is now serving as the petty excuse for resisting change and denying we need to move ahead and create opportunities.

For starters, those who are interested in living in the future instead of trying to prevent it would from happening would benefi t from looking at “Latino Metropolis,” a book by professors Víctor Valle and Rodolfo Torres. It helps put some of the history of migration into perspective. It implies how grand opportunities are forming and how global cities connect into new cross border networks.

Visionaries are needed. That’s the help-wanted sign some newspapers, websites and think tanks should put up on their front windows. Tell the losers with their hearts of darkness they need not apply and to just keep on walking by.

[José de la Isla, author of “The Rise of Hispanic Political Power” (Archer Books, 2003) writes a weekly commentary for Hispanic Link News Service. E-mail ­joseisla3@yahoo.com]. ©2009

Demand the original promissory note – stay in your home

by Marvin J. Ramirez

Marvin J. RamirezMarvin J. Ramírez

“Banks DO NOT HAVE the original Promissory Note, they only have a copy of the note, and because they think they are gods, they can steal our properties with photocopies of original documentation. Banks did not lend us anything. The Federal Reserve Bank does not allow them to lend FEDERAL RESERVE NOTES. Your house is already paid with the original Promissory Note, when it was sold and created the funds for the original transaction. Banks, Title Companies, Trustees, Debt Collectors, judges know it, but they are all committing FRAUD to steal the funds from the note + your house. Together we can stop them,” said an email I received last week.

And statements like these have been circulating in the city and around the nation, making some property owners to take their cases to court, while others, in the real estate industry, have remained skeptical, preferring not to challenge the banks or the system, preferring to stay quite out of fear.

Another email recommends to homeowners to ask the banks questions before they continue paying for something they have already paid for. Does this sound a little bit like fantasy theory from Fantasy Island? Of course it does, but is reality.

And Walker Todd explains it below how is it that the banks, when they say they lent you money, actually they didn’t; what they lent you was their own credit, instead of real money – because there is no money in circulation (House Joint Resolution 192, April 5, 1933).

Todd, an attorney and economic consultant, is a visiting research fellow and instructor at the American Institute for Economic Research in Great Barrington, Massachusetts.

Between 1985 and 1994, Todd was assistant general counsel and research officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland; before that was an attorney in the Legal Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Todd has been on four World Bank country missions and in 2004 organized a conference on World Bank and IMF reform.

And while this revelation is well known in the banking community as the banks’ dirty fraudulent secret, it is usually over-showed by corrupt judges, who often do not accept claimant’s defense that no money was lent, so they tend to rule in favor of the bankers. But this might start changing.

As the banking industry faces its biggest challenges in history amid a financial global crisis, the issue of where is the original note that the purported borrower signed is starting to be scrutinized by some mainstream media, which have declined to cover this banking fraud.

With a provocative headliner, “Facing foreclosure? Don’t leave. Squat,” the San Francisco Chronicle exposes the old trick of the banks of making money on the backs of consumers by demanding payment when in fact the borrowers signature created the money, created the money, meaning that the bank never lent their own money.

In her column published in the Chronicle on Feb. 4, Amy Goodman, the host of Democracy Now, a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 700 stations in North American, explains what many real estate professional and consumers have ignored for most of theirs lives.

In the article, Goodman quotes Marcy Kaptur, the longest-serving Democratic Congresswoman, whose district faces an epidemic of home foreclosures and 11.5 percent unemployment, recommending to her constituency not to move out of their homes.

“So I say to the American people, you be squatters in your own homes. Don’t leave,” and criticizes the Congressional bailouts failure to protect homeowners facing foreclosure.

And the legal technicality that Goodman quotes Kaptur exploiting, is that the subprime mortgages that are now causing millions to lose their homes, “were made, then bundled into securities and sold and resold repeatedly, by the very Wall Street banks that are now benefi ting from the TARP (Troubled Asset Relief Program).

According to the article, the banks foreclosing on families very often can’t locate the actual loan note that binds the homeowner to the bad loan. “Produce the note,” Kaptur recommends to those facing foreclosure demands of the banks.

And adds: “Therefore, stay in your property. Get proper legal representation … [if] Wall Street cannot produce the deed nor the mortgage audit trail … you should stay in your home. It is your castle. It’s more than a piece of property. …

If you look at the bad paper, if you look at where there’s trouble, 95 to 98 percent of the paper really has moved to fi ve institutions: JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wachovia, Citigroup and HSBC. They have this country held by the neck.”

­As another email received at our newsroom states, “Remember they never gave you a loan. Ask for proof. Tell them, ‘I have no record of having received a loan from you.’ Request proof of a loan.”

They don’t have one. They have nothing. It’s a lie. AN ILLUSION. They don’t even have the Promissory Note any more. The story is the same with automobiles, credit cards, lines of credits, any bank “loan”, continued the email.

Hispanic children lack more medical insurance and of a place to receive it

por la Universidad de Michigan

by the University of Michigan — Despite recent government efforts, the medical needs of about 6 million children in the United States are not being met, according to data from as recent as 2006. Even more troubling, researchers say, is the substantial growth in those numbers, from approximately 4.5 million children in 1998.

Children without insurance and children without a regular source of health care are the most likely to report unmet medical needs, suggesting that improvements are essential in government efforts to address the health of vulnerable children, according to a new study from the University of Michigan C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital.

Researchers also found that Hispanic children are uninsured at higher rates and do not have a regular place to seek medical attention known as a usual source of care (USC). The study appears in the new issue of the journal Pediatrics.

Researchers from the Child Health Evaluation and Research (CHEAR) Unit in the U-M Division of General Pediatrics set out to find how the proportions of publicly insured children (Medicaid and the State Child Health Insurance Program, or SCHIP) and uninsured children without a USC had changed over time (1998-2006).

The time period in the study was chosen so that researchers could evaluate the influence of two federal programs in providing a USC for vulnerable children.

SCHIP was initiated by the federal government in 1997 to expand health coverage to children. The President’s Health Center Initiative (PHCI) was launched in 2002 with a goal of expanding health centers in medically underserved communities.

Researchers found significant decreases in the proportions of children that were privately insured. In addition, increasing proportions of uninsured children reported having no USC over the study period.

Compared with a child covered with private insurance, the odds of reporting unmet medical needs increased steadily among uninsured children between 1998 and 2006, from 4.7 to 6.2. In addition, the odds of reporting unmet medical needs among children without a USC rose from 3.7 to 5.3 compared with children who identified a private office as a USC.

“Our research shows that these government programs have not yet fully addressed the health care needs of the most vulnerable children,” says lead study author Leesha K. Hoilette, M.D., a pediatric health services research fellow with the CHEAR Unit.

“As the nation continues to focus on the future of health care, and, in particular, health care for children, it seems insufficient to focus policy efforts on either health care coverage or access alone,” Hoilette says. “Initiatives must be targeted in tandem to increase both coverage and access and reduce unmet medical need.”

Researchers analyzed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Health Interview Survey. Their fi ndings show: The distribution of children according to insurance status changed signifi cantly in 2006 from 1998, with higher proportions enrolled in public programs and lower proportions privately insured.

  • The proportion of uninsured children has remained stable from 2002-2006, at approximately 10 percent. However, the proportion of uninsured reporting no USC increased over the same time period. (23 percent in 2006).
  • Hispanic children now constitute the largest proportions of uninsured children and those reporting no USC.
  • Private offices continued to be a USC for the bulk of children regardless of insurance status. However, the proportions of uninsured and SCHIP-enrolled children who identified a private offi ce as a USC has decreased recently.
  • With increasing proportions of uninsured children reporting no USC despite the overall proportion remaining stable, there is troubling shift toward reporting no USC, the researchers say. Uninsured children and children without a USC reported the highest odds of unmet medical need, compared with privately insured children with a USC. These tre­nds were stable over the study period.
  • Publicly insured children have two times the odds of reporting an unmet medical need compared with the privately insured, revealing a dichotomy that warrants attention on how to address this continuing disparity, Hoilette says.

L.A. school memorizes Méndez victory

by Jacqueline Baylón

Workers protest against Rite Aids Drugstors to highlight what they call employer abuse and need for Congress to pass: The Employer Free Choice Act. (photo by Marvin Ramirez)Workers protest against Rite Aids Drugstors to highlight what they call employer abuse and need for Congress to pass The Employer Free Choice Act.(photo by Marvin Ramirez)

A community in East Los Angeles will welcome its first new high school in nearly a century this year.

The real celebration, however, is that the Los Angeles Board of Education has voted to name itin honor of pioneer Mexican-American civil rights ­leaders Felicitas and Gonzalo Méndez.

The Méndez family fought against prejudice and segregation back in 1943, when their children were denied entry into the allwhite17th Street School in Westminster Calif, because of their “race.”

Mendez v. Westminster School District of Orange County was the 1947 decision by the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco that ended the practice of sending Latino children to “all Mexican” schools in California.

The suit was filed by Gonzalo Méndez and four other parents on behalf of the 5,000 Latino children who attended schools in the district.

It was a precursor to court cases including Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka in Kansas, which ended school segregation for all children nationwide The U.S. Supreme Court ruled May 17,1954, on that suit, filed three years earlier on behalf of 20 black elementary school students.

Residents of the Los Angeles school district said naming the campus after pioneer advocates who fought for their community is symbolic to the students and this pride will help increase graduation rates.

The Felicitas and Gonzalo Méndez Learning Center will open in Boyle Heights next fall.

It will feature two small learning communities with 3B classrooms and 1,025 seats, providing relief from overcrowding at Roosevelt High School.

IN OTHER RELATED EDUCATION NEWS –

Economic Necessity Driving Latinos to Community Colleges

By Edwin Mora

As the national economic turmoil expands, more Latinos are flocking to two-year institutions “Latinos will continue to over-concentrate in community colleges so long the economic crisis continues on,” says Antonio Flores, president of the Hispanic ­Association of Colleges and Universities. According to HACU, 46 percent of Latino college students attend two-year institutions. This contrasts to 37 percent of all college students.

“We estimate that enrollments at community colleges has risen approximately eight to ten percent for fall ‘08,” says Norma Kent, vice president of communications for the American Association of Community Colleges. “We’ve had increases reported from one percent to almost 20 percent.”

Cost of tuition in comparison to four-year institutions, according to Kent, is one of the main reasons for the increase.

­

Colombia and Ecuador take steps to meet each other’s demands

by the El Reportero’s news services

In mid-January relations between Ecuador and Colombia entered what seemed like a phase of renewed acrimony, as Bogotá reacted to new Ecuadorean immigration controls calling them ‘discriminatory [and] maybe even xenophobic.’ However, at the same time, both governments were taking steps in other areas which suggested a more conciliatory approach; Ecuador explicitly stated that its security buildup in the border area was intended to eliminate the presence of the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc) guerrillas while Colombia announced the establishment along the border of a large military presence of its own.

Freed hostage accuses Farc of massacre

On 5 February Sigifredo López, the last of the politicians held by the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (Farc), was released. López immediately accused the Farc of killing in 2007 the other 11 politicians who were kidnapped with him in 2002.

The government of President Alvaro Uribe has always argued that the Farc killed the state politicians on 18 June 2007. López, though not an eye-witness, endorses the government’s version, and his evidence, though not conclusive, is convincing. López suggests that the Farc killed the deputies by mistake when one Farc group mistook another for a government (or mercenary) rescue attempt to free the hostages.

Brazil still loves Lula, but Serra is president in waiting

President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva’s popularity remains unassailable. In fact, according to the latest (January 2009) CNT/Sensus opinion poll, the most widely cited barometer of the prevailing public mood in the country, Brazilians take comfort from his sunny disposition and his resolute confi dence in the face of the current economic downturn, which is threatening jobs and household incomes this year.

The president’s approval rating reached a new record-breaking 84 percent in January, up from 80.3 percent in Dece­mber 2008, while the government’s approval rating was 72.5 percent, up from 71.1 percent previously. Frustratingly for Lula and his ruling centreleft Partido dos Trabalhadores (PT), however, the main centre-right oppostion candidate, São Paulo state governor José Serra, of the Partido da Social Democracia Brasileira (PSDB), remains the firm favourite to replace Lula in the next presidential election in 2010.

RHHA calls for fresh approach to reach hispanics

by José de la Isla

HOUSTON – The Republican National Hispanic Assembly will lead what it describes as a “fresh dialogue to recapture its competitiveness’’ in winning the Hispanic vote at a two-hour forum and “frank discussion” in Washington, D.C. Nov 19.

“The Republican Party cannot hope to regain a governor majority or win national elections without significantly improving its results among Hispanic voters,” warned the RNHA in announcing the $50 breakfast event cosponsored by the Hispanic Leadership Fund and Americans for Tax Reform.

Among senior party leaders listed as participants along with RNHA President Danny Vargas.’ is Michael Steele’ newly elected president of the Republican National Committee.

Following the election of Steele to that leadership post, GOP activist Leslie Sánchez pondered whether the two political parties will be able to look beyond the stereotypes of Latinos as they vie to attract them. Last year Sánchez authored “Los Republicanos: Why Hispanics and Republicans Need Each Other,” a book that drew media attention but apparently changed few minds within the party.

Her question is elemental Hispanics, stereotypes aside, can be rich and poor, entrepreneurial and the jobless, colonial pioneers and yesterday’s arrivals. Willingness to hold together as a community is a strength that registered in last November’s presidential election.

Despite some claims to the contrary, the historical truth is Hispanics align roughly two-thirds Democratic and one-third Republican There are exceptions, of course, and John McCain’s 31 percent of the Latino vote in November was close to the mark.

Sánchez recognizes Republicans must win at least 35°/0 of the Hispanic vote to remain viable in future presidential races. Like many Republicans since the 1970s, she concentrates on the affinity with entrepreneurs, the middle class, and the upwardly mobile as the best recruits.

The problem with classism like that is it drives a wedge among Latinos as a community of interests.

This approach was most recently rejected as Latinos of differing income levels and professional strata were slapped in the face with the reality that hateful anti-immigrant talk really does brush-paint their own families. Many who thought they were accepted into the middle- and upper-class milieu discovered they were still perceived as oUtsiders.

Brought into question is whether it’s possible to be a respectable Republican and a Latino as well.

By allowing anti-immigrant radicals to run amok, divide-and-conquer class politics is played out while the party preaches there is room for everybody. Lost are the shared interests of fair chance, good schools, democratic representation and the like. No party has a patent on such values.

The challenge before Chairman Steele isn’t how to entice a Latino constituency to the existing Republican Party but how to prove to Hispanics the party is capable of change and worthy of their participation. vVhere will the next generation of moderate, sensible GOP candidates come from, those who know better than to shoot the chef when they are hungry.

It’s worth remembering that a good many Republican and independent voters helped throw out a lot of the incumbents in 2006 and 2008 who joined Tom Tancredo’s inquisitions.

That should have sent the leadership a clear message: too many Republican candidates, even those wearing sheep’s clothing, scared Hispanic and non-Hispanic voters as well with their endorsements of hateful policies.

It concerned our national morality Bullying immigrants was the wrong response to the problem.

The Republican dilemma is that without Latinos, the party doesn’t stand a chance in any near-term presidential election, and it will increasingly lose statewide races in new Democratic territory such as Nevada, New Mexico, Florida, Virginia and North Carolina. The usual Republican electorate is not growing, while the Latino population is.

Chairman Steele could start with a culture cleansing. Just as Bill Clinton’s New Democratic politics stole pages from the Republican play book, so can Chairman Steele steal one from him.

He could begin by apologizing. The party has become morally lax. It has compromised the nation’s values by proposing preposterous ­policies and promoted tired stereotypes It ain’t much—not nearly enough—but letting the putrid fumes out of the room is a start. Hispanic Link.