A nationwide alliance of immigrant rights and
community organizations on Thursday launched a new movement aimed at
registering more than one million Latino and Asian voters ahead of
November's presidential elections.
The movement, called the
We Are America Alliance (WAAA), will reach out to voters in 13 states,
which also have the largest Latino populations, said the alliance's
executive director, Holli Holiday.
'For the first time, both
the Republican and Democratic presidential nominees are paying
attention to this constituency,' said Arturo Vargas, executive director
of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials
(NALEO).
The initiative comes as both major presidential
candidates have appeared in recent weeks before prominent Hispanic
groups, a fast- growing demographic that could help sway the November
elections.
On Tuesday, Democratic presidential candidate
Barack Obama said his administration would put the issues facing
Hispanic Americans on a par with those facing all Americans and prevent
employers from exploiting immigrant labour.
Republican
candidate John McCain, who also addressed Hispanic voters Tuesday, was
more cautious, focussing on his economic plan for all Americans and
reiterating his support for free-trade deals a week after travelling to
Colombia and Mexico.
Vargas said, 'This initiative is not
just about one election. It is about the complete integration of
immigrants in the political fabric of the country. We intend to inspire
10 million Latinos to vote on November 4.'
About 7.5 million
Latinos voted in the previous presidential election, and the alliance
projects at least 9.2 million will vote this year.
'We hope
our projections are wrong, and want to make sure that many more of the
17 million eligible Latino voters come forward,' Vargas told reporters.
He also said that the presidential candidates were mistaken if
they thought immigrants were only concerned about comprehensive
immigration reform - a highly controversial issue over the last few
years in American politics.
'They are also concerned about
issues that matter to all Americans such as the economy, healthcare and
the war in Iraq,' Vargas said.
A recent WAAA poll of 800
Latino voters found that 86 per cent were paying close attention to
this election and 70 per cent had voted in the primaries.
Vargas argued that Hispanics had already played a crucial role in the
election, helping presumptive Republican nominee John McCain win the
Florida primary against his then-rival Mitt Romney.
'If no
Hispanics had voted in Florida, then Mitt Romney would have won,'
Vargas said. 'Today we march. Tomorrow we vote. Tomorrow has arrived.'
WAAA's Holiday said, 'Groups such as ours have been criticized that we
can mobilize people but can't get them to vote. We will work to prove
this wrong.'
WAAA will target people under 25, newly
naturalized citizens and infrequent voters in the 13 states, which
include California, Texas, Colorado, New Mexico, New York, Illinois,
Arizona, Florida, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania and
Virginia.