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Latino group launches $10-million campaign to boost voter turnout

A bilingual sign points to a polling station in Austin, Texas.
Mi Familia Vota said it will spend $7 million on get-out-the-vote measures and an additional $3 million on digital and television ads. Above, a bilingual sign points to a polling station in Austin, Texas, in 2015.
(John Moore / Getty Images)
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A national organization is announcing a $10-million campaign to turn out Latino voters in several of this year’s battleground states.

Mi Familia Vota, based in Phoenix, said it will spend $7 million on get-out-the-vote measures and an additional $3 million on digital and television ads, starting in Arizona and Florida.

Arizona in particular is seen as a battleground because of shifting demographics in the traditionally Republican state. Latinos are a growing proportion of the electorate.

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The campaign comes amid rising concerns about Latino turnout in a year when that community has been hit particularly hard by the coronavirus. Latinos account for higher rates of infection from COVID-19 compared to their share of the population, and many are struggling financially from lost jobs and lower wages.

“Basically what we’re saying is we’re not going to wait for political parties to do it themselves. They don’t invest in our communities,” said the group’s director and chief executive, Hector Sanchez Barba.

A pandemic-triggered drought of new voters has progressives desperately moving to reinvent the anachronistic institution of voter registration drives.

According to the Pew Research Center, 13.3% of eligible voters in the U.S. this year are Latino, a record high. Pew projects that in Arizona, 24% of eligible voters are Latino, up 2 percentage points from 2016. In Florida, Latinos are projected to be 20% of eligible voters.

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That doesn’t mean they will all register or cast ballots on election day. U.S. census data shows that 47% of eligible Hispanic voters in Arizona cast a ballot in 2016, compared with nearly 63% of eligible white voters.

Mi Familia Vota aims to get 3.3 million more Latinos in its targeted states to vote.

Latino turnout in states such as Arizona could help decide the presidential election, said Matt A. Barreto, co-founder and managing partner of Latino Decisions, a polling and research firm based in Los Angeles.

“We already saw this in 2018, where record Latino vote in a midterm provided the margin of victory for [Arizona Democratic U.S. Sen. Kyrsten] Sinema,” he said.

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Sanchez Barba says Mi Familia Vota will use text messages, phone calls and digital and TV ads to reach potential voters in Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Texas and Wisconsin.

Joe Biden is not only hoping to run up the score against President Trump with Latino voters but also to push their turnout to higher levels.

The campaign comes as Democrats and Republicans vie for the Latino vote. The Trump campaign, for example, also is targeting Latino voters through messaging about the economy, public safety and family values. Andres Malave, regional communications director of Hispanic outreach for the Republican National Committee, said the Trump campaign has had a permanent presence in Arizona since 2016.

“President Trump’s policies are delivering for our families by ensuring safe communities and rebuilding the strongest economy in the world. Meanwhile, [Joe] Biden is relying on other groups to bail him out to cover for his decades of failed policies that have disproportionately hurt Latino families,” Malave said.

While Mi Familia Vota has not endorsed Biden, the presumptive Democratic nominee, its voter push will focus on turning out Latinos to vote against Trump, Sanchez Barba said.

He participated in a town hall with Biden in which the former vice president made a series of commitments to the Latino community, such as placing Latinos at the highest level of his administration.

“After the election, hopefully with a new president, we will immediately launch an accountability campaign,” Sanchez Barba said.

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Just shy of 2020 voter deadlines, the federal agency that handles citizenship is out of money, and thousands of green card holders can’t become citizens.

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