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Gabriel Lerner

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Semana Latina: Who Are The Latino Leaders Of Tomorrow?

Posted: 06/02/2012 8:55 am

As recent elections in heavily Latino-populated states like Texas, Florida and California indicate, there is no shortage of Latino candidates running for office at the city, county, parish and state levels. There are Hispanics who submit themselves to the will of the voters for school and water districts and tax boards; for judges and district attorneys, and all the way up the ladder including state legislature races.

Here in southern California, dozens of Hispanic candidates are flooding our mailboxes with colorful electoral literature just in time for the June 5 primary and state election. While most of them are Democrats, a good number are also running as Republicans.

Some of the Californian candidates are well-known politicians, like Richard Alarcon, who is now a member of the Los Angeles city counsel and who previously served as state Assembly member (for three months), state senator, and prior to that, again, LA council member between 1993-98.

There is also Ian Calderon, the 26-year-old son of Assembly member Charles Calderon, who has to leave office due to term limit laws. His uncle is Ron Calderon, a state Senator. Another uncle, Tom, is trying to regain his seat in the state Assembly. An entire dynasty of Los Angeles County Latino Democrats.

On the other hand, some are fairly new to voters, despite often having a background as staff member for other elected officials. Just in California's 51st district - my own - there are four new Latino candidates, who all identify as progressive Democrats: Jimmy Gomez, Arturo Chavez, Luis Lopez, and Oscar Gutierrez.

And not only here in California. In Texas, with two new "Hispanic" congressional districts created and four new seats in Congress following an increase in the state's Latino population, Hispanic candidates are also vying for elected office. On July 31st, Ted Cruz, a tea party Republican who is also Latino will face Lt. Gov. David Dewhurst in a primary runoff for the Senate seat being vacated by Kay Bailey Hutchison. And former state representative Domingo Garcia is on the runoff ballot with state Rep. Marc Veasey in the solidly Democratic North Texas 33rd District.

In Central Florida, new redistricting maps are allowing for more Hispanic candidates, that, some say, can change the solidly Republican and Caucasian legislature in Tallahassee, So instead of only "one Hispanic- and one black-leaning house seat in Orange County, the redistricting maps approved this spring have two of each. A new Hispanic-majority Senate seat in Orange, Osceola and Polk counties was created."

More Hispanic candidates... Who knows, perhaps one day some of these candidates will become the next Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, or Antonio Villaraigosa, Mayor of Los Angeles, or Congressman Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill, or Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis, or the former secretary of HUD, Professor Henry Cisneros, or former Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales...?

Or, maybe, maybe, the next Cesar Chavez or Dolores Huerta.

Last September, at a roundtable with Latino news outlets, President Obama told me that " "within my lifetime we will have a Latino candidate for President who is very competitive and may win".

Yeaaah. Really?

Un momentito, por favor. Wait a minute.

Let's stop the self-indulging narrative. The truth is that few of these candidates and leaders are qualified to stand in line for the chance to be like their great predecessors.

This week, Dolores Huerta was honored by the President of the United States with the Medal of Freedom, one of the nation's highest honors.

And a thought sent chills through my spine: where is the new, the next, Dolores Huerta? While she is receiving a medal for what she has done decades ago, and for the work her foundation does currently, where are the future recipients of the Medal of Freedom developing?

Maybe they are not running for office. Not yet.

Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta (and Edward R. Roybal, Bert Corona, Rodolfo "Corky" Gonzalez", Reies Tijerina, etc.), were all products of the people's struggle for civil rights. They fought for the working people in the fields and factories. This is how they were formed, and how they became known.

Where are the Latino leaders of the future?

Let me answer my own question with another question...
Do you know the legend of the Bluebird of Happiness?

My mother taught this to me and I have been telling it to my kids forever. The sons of a family leave their parents and go on a years-long journey crossing land and sea in search of the Bluebird that, they are certain, will bring Happiness forever. Decades later, as planned, all reunite at the home of their parents to confess to each other that their quest was in vain and none of them had found the magic Bluebird. They have all come to realize that the Bluebird is alive and well and living in a cage in their parents' home.

The Bluebird is among us.

The Latino leaders of our future are with us, today, on our college campuses.

They are the DREAMers, the undocumented kids who fight for recognition and legal status.

They were brought from abroad by their parents as children. They don't know any other country. Many of them barely speak, or write, Spanish. They could be deported any day, but they fight to become American citizens. They excel in class and they fight for their kind. They are strong and courageous. They left the shadows and jumped into the limelight. They march, carrying flags and banners for freedom.

The civil rights struggle of today is fought by them, by the DREAMERS.
Some of them, have found in the pages of the Huffington Post Latino Voices a platform from which to blog and to announce their credo and beliefs.

They are our dear, dear, sons and daughters. And our future.

Hopefully, after the November elections, Congress will discover common sense and approve the DREAM Act.

Let them be free. And let them take responsibility to continue their struggle, but for the entire community. To represent us all.

Let us give way to the emerging generation of Latino leaders: the DREAMers.

 

Follow Gabriel Lerner on Twitter: www.twitter.com/@gabrielerner

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As recent elections in heavily Latino-populated states like Texas, Florida and California indicate, there is no shortage of Latino candidates running for office at the city, county, parish and state l...
As recent elections in heavily Latino-populated states like Texas, Florida and California indicate, there is no shortage of Latino candidates running for office at the city, county, parish and state l...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wbearl
Retired Manager Mechanical Operations
08:00 AM on 06/04/2012
Articles like this and mind sets like this are probably the largest road block to true integration. I don't care what a persons ethnic back ground is, I don't care what sex a person is, I don't even care what sexual orientation they have, I don't care how old they are, I want to know are they qualified for what ever job they are striving for. If they have to use their so called minority status as an edge rather than their skills, then I have to wonder about their qualifications.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nypapajoe
07:17 AM on 06/04/2012
It ain't Rubio!
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Pferdefreund
May I always be the person my dogs think I am.
05:30 PM on 06/03/2012
It will not matter who the leader is, what ethnic background they have, the only thing that counts is, that they are concerned for the welfare of this country and it's citizens. We have a very diverse base of races in this country and I would like to see a leader for once, who can unify the masses for the sake of America, and not devide them according to racism. I can only hope.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bldr1bob
10:03 PM on 06/03/2012
I was reading your post and envisioning Kate Smith singing "God Bless America" with the flag flying in the background............. not that it's a bad thing...................
10:35 AM on 06/03/2012
In THEIR country leading THEIR people?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jonathan Munoz
2 things you can't argue with: crazy and stupid
05:34 PM on 06/03/2012
yes those people are called Americans

I plan to be a Latino Leader in America
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rubbercow
Pretty vacant
10:00 PM on 06/03/2012
How, exactly, will you lead "Latinos" against your perceived enemy?
10:28 AM on 06/03/2012
'Who Are The Latino Leaders Of Tomorrow?' Hopefully will be a citizen of USA.
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ConservativeSuperstar
Socialism...So good it must be mandated...
10:19 AM on 06/03/2012
The so-called Latinas would be much better off if they thought of themselves as Americans (if they are legal) and went about living their lives as opposed to being tagged as being part of some group that the Democrat party likes to lump people in to.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jonathan Munoz
2 things you can't argue with: crazy and stupid
05:35 PM on 06/03/2012
American says where you live

Latino says what your culture is

I consider myself both. An American who happens to be Latino
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lavender menace
I calls it like I see it.
09:13 PM on 06/03/2012
Americans are people who are US citizens. Those who are US citizens carry a US passport Those who are not US citizens are citizens of their country of origin and carry the passport of that country. Just because you live in the US, does not make you an America as if you live in a garage, that would make you a car.
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spytheweb
Black Democrat
06:25 PM on 06/04/2012
"We should insist that if the immigrant who comes here does in good faith become an

American and assimilates himself to us he shall be treated on an exact equality with every one else, for it is an outrage to discriminate against any such man because of creed or birth-place or origin.

But this is predicated upon the man's becoming in very fact an American and nothing but an American. If he tries to keep segregated with men of his own origin and separated from the rest of America, then he isn't doing his part as an American. There can be no divided allegiance here. . . We have room for but one language here, and that is the English language, for we intend to see that the crucible turns our people out as Americans, of American nationality, and not as dwellers in a polyglot boarding-house; and we have room for but one soul loyalty, and that is loyalty to the American people." -
Theodore Roosevelt
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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08:16 AM on 06/03/2012
Its important to remember that Cubans are not the only Latinos living in Florida. Florida is home to the largest Puerto Rican community (outside of NY) and significant Dominican and Mexican communities
No wonder Rick Scott wants to repress the vote.
10:30 AM on 06/03/2012
Florida once was a beautiful state, that people cheerished.
11:03 PM on 06/03/2012
A little difference there, Puerto Rico is not a foreign country but a US territory. Cuba and Dominican republic are foreign nations.
02:40 AM on 06/03/2012
Hello.... Ian Calderon?? Excuse me....there are three American Hispanic running for State Assembly. Not just one..........There are three American Hispanics running for the 57th Assembly District in California. A 26 year old named Ian CAlderon that has money and name recognition from this fathers and uncles career in the California State Assembly. Then there is Rudy Bermudez who succesfully built a political career in the area and also served in the State Assembly then there is this local man who went to Biola University, raised a family in La Mirada and build a nice comfortable career in Real Estate by the name of Noel Jaimes. That would be me. Three American Hispanic running for office. I think the topi of Hispanic leadership is pretty much settled in the 57th Assembly district in California. Thank you very much -- Noel Jaimes
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ugly american
"I drank what?"- Last words of Socrates
12:06 AM on 06/03/2012
Alberto Gonzales was a hack who brought shame and controversy to the office of the Attorney General. He was there to mark whatever Bush wanted as "legal".
Hilda Solis seems to want to carry over her former job into her new one and unabashedly says so.
Gutierrez is interested in helping anybody who is here without legal permission and doing away with American sovereignty. Say yes to independence for Puerto Rico! Then we could be rid of him.
For someone to be a leader in America, they should be an American first, not as an afterthought.
They should not be Latin-American, African-American, Asian-American or even Native-American.
The struggle for more than half a century was for all American citizens to be treated equally. For that for fight to have meaning, race must be an afterthought.
For every citizen, especially those who wish to lead, their first loyalty should be to this nation, not their own race or heritage or any individual or foreign nation.
If their first consideration is the welfare of any one group over welfare of the whole, they are not really fit to lead. We have far too many of those already.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nasknit
Freedom isn't free.
01:18 AM on 06/04/2012
Well said.
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Hoodooman
Non-Aggression Principle
06:09 PM on 06/02/2012
A true leader realizes that their label is irrelavent when faced with the responsibilities of being a leader.
06:07 PM on 06/02/2012
A win for the Latinos is to fight for the right to vote for leaders who really care. I have not heard one word from Mitt how he would give Latinos anything.
07:23 PM on 06/02/2012
Why should he "give Latinos anything"? Why should he give any group anything. The president is the president of all people. I wish the pandering race-baiter in the White House now realized that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
legnotsothrilled
08:17 PM on 06/02/2012
I hope he "gives" the US a good look at the 14th Amendment.

Oh...and really..."abroad"?
11:43 AM on 06/09/2012
Mr Huffposer, you leave on a fantasy bubble house, since when the "president" rules or cares for the people? Bush business Model? Nixon? Carter? Reagan, jajaja, come on, the rulers are the lobbying pacs, and they rule, the today's presidents are nothing but pets..
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
05:39 PM on 06/02/2012
Rather than sinking into sentimental rhetoric, it might be useful to focus uon answering the question: Which progressive Latinos in politics should we be thinking of in terms of moving up the electoral ladder? Who is showing promise and why? Let's hear about people in the process and let the dreaming kids get on with their dreaming. Their days will come.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
moonlightesq
05:39 PM on 06/02/2012
"Who knows, perhaps one day some of these candidates will become the next Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor, or Antonio Villaraigosa, Mayor of Los Angeles..."

No way! Villaraigosa still hasn't pass the Bar exam even after three tries. You can't become a judge if you can't even pass the State's bar exam.
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spytheweb
Black Democrat
03:54 PM on 06/02/2012
I don't know about other people think but when i hear the words Hispanic/Latino i think of something foreign. The question should have been where are the Americans leaders of tomorrow. Stating Latino leaders makes me think of something other than American.

BTW, how are Mexico's leaders doing?
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rubbercow
Pretty vacant
08:55 PM on 06/02/2012
Their insistence on constantly reminding all other ethnic groups of how they are "special" is going to cause them more problems than I think they realize.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jonathan Munoz
2 things you can't argue with: crazy and stupid
05:37 PM on 06/03/2012
thinking of foreign when you hear Latino is your problem, plenty of Latino born and raised in the US
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spytheweb
Black Democrat
08:18 PM on 06/03/2012
My problem huh?

"A 2009 Pew Hispanic Center report found that over half of Latinos living in the U.S., between the ages of 16 and 25 identify their nationality by their family’s country of origin. 20 percent of those surveyed identified themselves simply as Hispanic or Latino, while less than 20 percent call themselves “American.”

http://www.examiner.com/article/is-this-pizza-chain-really-promoting-illegal-immigration
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panamarine
My opinion is only an opinion
03:21 PM on 06/02/2012
I didn't see Marco Rubio on that list....Purged from it? Ha-ha! Marco THINKS he got the Latinos in his corner. Do a head count the next time he holds a meeting anywhere. You will see what I mean.
12:02 PM on 06/09/2012
Marco is just a Pet project of GOP to excuse themselves to themselves, the fact of the matter is that Cuban refugee have no interest to close ties with the Mexican American community, and Rubio has Never before intended to reach out to them, just now, the 20% we call ourselves Mexican American, plus the Chicano block, plus the "pocho" block (Mexicanos turned American living here for no longer then 10 years who care and research politics, plus the NEW Mexican turned America citizen, he nor the GOP fool us, we are Republicans by Principals and Ideology, but the front door have been locked from inside by the far right wing GOP block and the "leaders from moderate and liberals GOPers are dead afraid to fight back, we are outside waiting to be listen...