Posted on 06/28/2008 9:38:12 AM PDT by Coffee200am
Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton introduced former rival Sen. Barack Obama to her Hispanic supporters and fundraisers Thursday night, and he got an earful from a group that remains skeptical nearly a month after their Democratic primary battle ended.
We were offering constructive criticism that will help him in the fall, said Ingrid Duran, a Falls Church consultant who advised Clinton on Hispanic issues. At the end of the day, well support the nominee. The question is how actively.
About 25 members of Clintons Hispanic Leadership Council and Hispanic Finance Council met with Obama at the Mayflower Hotel at the invitation of Clinton. Among those attending were Rep. Joe Baca (D-Calif.), chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus; Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Calif.); and United Farmworkers of America co-founder Delores Huerta.
Hispanic votes have been key in recent presidential contests. George W. Bush won 35 percent of their votes in 2000, and 40 percent in 2004.
Some who attended the Thursday meeting said they had the impression from the Obama campaign that he doesnt think he needs Hispanic votes because hes assuming hell win heavily Hispanic states like California and New York. Obama told them that wasnt true.
He told the group he needed the Latino community to win, said Duran, who served on the Clinton campaigns Hispanic councils.
Those in attendance want to see more outreach to Hispanics, such as a campaign organization dedicated to Hispanic supporters. They also want to see an understanding that Hispanic issues extend beyond immigration, Duran said.
Duran said the meeting was positive, but shes waiting to see if the campaign delivers on Obamas promises.
Time will tell, she said. I want to see what the follow through is going to be.
The meeting came a day before Clinton (D-N.Y.) and Obama (D-Ill.) campaigned together in Unity, N.H. It came several hours after Obama met with a group of female legislators at Democratic National Headquarters.
Earlier in the day Thursday, Clinton had used her first major public speech since conceding the nomination to stump for Obama before the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO).
Female Hispanic lawmakers whod supported Clinton skipped a meeting earlier this month between Obama and the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. Shortly before the meeting Thursday, Rep. Loretta Sanchez (D-Calif.) made it clear that shes not satisfied with Obamas outreach to members of Congress or the 18 million people who voted for Clinton.
My door is open, Sanchez said in a brief interview. If you dont make time to meet with the 535 people whos support you need, how are you going to win over 18 million people.
The legal ones or the "Undocumented" ones?.../sarc
Obama reminded the group that they share a common enemy, “Whitey”, or “Guerro”, el pendajo blanco.
Obama Gains Ground With Latino Voters
ED MORALES
The Hartford Courant
June 24, 2008
Suddenly it seems that Sen. Barack Obama’s Latino problem has become a Latino edge. A recent Gallup poll shows the Illinois senator winning 62 percent of registered Latino voters nationwide, with Republican nominee Sen. John McCain lagging behind at 29 percent.
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