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Latinos Might Decide Kansas Election Outcomes

The state only has about 121,000 Latino voters, but experts say they could make a difference in the tight races for governor, U.S. Senate and secretary of state.

By Franco Ordonez

 

Kansas may not be considered Latino country, but the small, albeit growing, Hispanic community across the state is emerging as a potential threat to shake up the political landscape./p>

The state's approximately 121,000 Latino voters make up just 6 percent of the electorate, but experts say they could make a difference in the tight races for governor, U.S. Senate and secretary of state./p>

Armando Minjarez, a 28-year-old Wichita artist and activist, has been talking up the need to vote with his neighborhood bread maker and knocking on doors at the homes of Latino registered voters in the heavily Hispanic-populated communities across western Kansas./p>

"Races are being won by 300 votes," said Minjarez, who works on voter turnout drives with Kansas People's Action and Women for Kansas, left-leaning groups that say they're pushing for change in Kansas' leadership. "So if those two, three hundred people I have talked to, if half of those go out and vote ... if a third of them go out and vote ... that's a huge impact."/p>

If turnout is low, as expected, and Latinos mobilize, even a small percentage of them _ like any other group _ could alter the election, said Chapman Rackaway, a political science professor at Fort Hays State University in Kansas./p>

"A block of 10,000 votes by the Latino population could have a profound impact on the race," Rackaway said./p>

After the 2010 election, no Democrat held an elected statewide office in Kansas. But Democrats now are within striking distance of the governor's mansion. Gov. Sam Brownback, who has steered the state far to the right, has suffered in the polls./p>

U.S. Sen. Pat Roberts, a Republican who has made immigration a campaign issue, is suddenly in danger of losing to independent Greg Orman after the nominated Democrat in the race, Chad Taylor, dropped out./p>

On immigration, Roberts speaks almost exclusively about the need for stronger border patrol. Orman also speaks of the need for a stronger border, but he's argued that 11 million immigrants who are already in the country illegally can't be deported and, provided they pay a fine, he thinks they should be allowed to "get in line" for eventual U.S. citizenship./p>

Rackaway said Latinos also could be a factor in Democrats' efforts to unseat Republican Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who is known nationwide in the immigrant rights community for his controversial role in helping to draft some of the strongest immigration enforcement policies in Arizona and Alabama, among other states./p>

 

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