miércoles, noviembre 03, 2010

Ray Suarez: Post Election Night - The Huffington Post

The Huffington Post, by Ray Suarez, Las Vegas, NV, 03/11/2010, excerpt/extracto.-

The polls weren't wrong. The Democrats took a beating on Election Day 2010. Late into the day, the head of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, Rep. Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, angrily rejected claims based on projections that Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her leadership team would be swept out of power. Van Hollen was wrong: Fairly early in the evening it was clear the GOP would zoom past the 218 seats needed to take control of the House and win a comfortable cushion in addition.

Florida will have a new Cuban-American US Senator, Marco Rubio. New Mexico will have the first Latina governor, Susana Martinez. Texas will likely have a Mexican-American Republican member of Congress, Quico Canseco, who beat veteran incumbent Ciro Rodriguez in the vast border district that snakes east along the Rio Grande from the outskirts of El Paso, Texas. Former Federal Court Judge Brian Sandoval, also a Republican, will become the first Latino governor of Nevada (beating Harry Reid's son, Rory, by a convincing margin).

The networks have projected Jerry Brown the winner in the California governor's race, after his opponent Meg Whitman spent more than $100 million of her own money trying to jump start a political career after an adult life in business. Polling approaching Election Day saw Brown getting the biggest share of the state's big Latino vote, after Whitman's shifting stories about her undocumented housekeeper neutralized her enormous spending on Spanish media.

I spent Election Day in Nevada, where Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid was fighting for his political life against Republican nominee and former state legislator Sharron Angle. Senator Reid, an old fashioned political technician, is not very popular in Nevada. Even as voters sent him back to Washington for another six years they were telling pollsters they don't like him very much or approve of the job he's doing for them. Sometimes in politics you get lucky with the other side's choice of an opponent. So even though it was a terrible year for incumbents, for Democrats, for the party establishment, and party leaders, Reid won even though he was all those things.

A big part of his strategy involved making Latino voters one of the foundation stones of a winning coalition. The state's population is just under a quarter Latino, and Reid gambled that driving turnout in the community would build a wall against Angle's passionate anti-Washington voters. The state Democratic Party emphasized races down the ballot, for State Assembly and State Senate, and steered funding to political novices in strongly Latino districts.

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