Vanessa Cardenas
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Vanessa Cárdenas is the Director of Progress 2050, a project of the Center for American Progress in Washington, D.C., which seeks to build a progressive agenda that is more inclusive of the rich racial and ethnic makeup of our nation. Prior to this position, Vanessa served as Director for Ethnic Media at American Progress where she helped elevate the organization’s profile among ethnic media outlets.

Vanessa came to American Progress from the National Immigration Forum, where she worked as a policy/communications associate and outreach coordinator and helped bridge the policy, communications, and grassroots advocacy world to disseminate the Forum’s message and work. At the Forum, she participated in numerous local and national organizing and legislative campaigns including the efforts to pass immigration reform in 2006 and 2007, organizing in support of the Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride, and the campaign to defeat Proposition 200 in Arizona.

Prior to the Forum, she managed and administered public education and outreach programs serving diverse communities on a range of issues such as education, civic participation, public safety, and youth leadership for the Arlington Public Schools and the Arlington County Fire Department.

Vanessa was profiled as one of the “100 People to Watch in the Next Century” by Washingtonian magazine and is a regular guest on CNN en Español, Telemundo, Univision, and BBC, among others and has been widely quoted in various print publications such as the U.S. News and World Report, The Washington Post, and La Opinion. She holds a B.A. in government and politics and a master’s in public administration, both from George Mason University. She is a 2010 fellow of the National Hispana Leadership Institute and an alum of the Sorensen Institute for Political Leadership at the University of Virginia and Leadership Arlington. She was born in Brooklyn, NY, grew up in Bolivia, and currently lives in Fairfax, VA.

Blog Entries by Vanessa Cardenas

Equal Pay Matters for Latinas

0 Comments | Posted April 17, 2012 | 10:27 AM

As we observe Equal Pay Day, I cannot help but ponder the discouraging statistics on how much less women make compared to men, especially Latinas. In particular, I look at how the gender wage gap has affected my mom, a single working mother, and myself.

When my mom and...

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Romney Takes Wrong Track on Economy for Latinos: Candidate Plans to Cut into Programs Important to Hispanics

0 Comments | Posted February 3, 2012 | 7:08 AM

In the race to win the Republican presidential nomination and capture a sizable portion of the Latino vote, Mitt Romney's campaign is hoping to shift the emphasis from his extreme anti-immigration rhetoric to his economic plans to make the argument that when it comes to Latinos'...

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Latinos Are Fleeing Republicans, Not Flocking to Them

0 Comments | Posted December 8, 2010 | 3:13 PM

A few conservative talking heads are pointing to the slight increase in Latino support for Republicans in the 2010 election as evidence of growing support for the GOP among Latinos. Careful scrutiny, however, reveals that this assertion is nothing more than spin. Republican support among Latinos is actually at one...

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Be Empowered by not Voting?

0 Comments | Posted October 21, 2010 | 5:51 PM

In a new low in conservative operatives' partisan politics, an absurd political ad is telling Latinos not to vote in the upcoming elections because President Barack Obama and the Democrats have not delivered on immigration reform. While there has been no movement on immigration reform, the fact is...

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