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Trump’s candidacy sparks ‘surge’ in citizenship
By Ed O’Keefe, Washington Post
May. 11, 2016 7:06 pm
WASHINGTON - Donald Trump's presidential campaign is spurring a record number of citizenship applications and increases in voter registration among Latinos upset by the candidate's rhetoric and fearful of his plans to crack down on immigration.
Activists, lawmakers and political consultants around the country say Hispanics are flooding into citizenship workshops and congressional offices and jamming hotlines on how to become U.S. citizens or register to vote. Many say they are primarily motivated by the rise of Trump, who has proposed deporting 11 million undocumented immigrants and building a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.
According to the most recent national statistics, more than 185,000 citizenship applications were submitted in the final three months of 2015, up 14 percent from the year before and up 8 percent compared with the same period ahead of the 2012 elections.
Experts expect a similar, if not larger, uptick for the first three months of 2016 when new federal data is released in coming weeks.
'A surge in Latino engagement is coming,” said Ben Monterroso, executive director of Mi Familia Vota, a nonpartisan group registering Hispanics in six states. '. . . Unsolicited, people tell you that ‘I'm becoming a citizen because I want to vote against Donald Trump' or ‘I want to vote against the attacks on our community.' '
The increased activity comes as Trump has continued to anger immigrant and refugee rights activists with his words and campaign pledges. On Wednesday, he told Fox News that he might establish a commission to explore his call for a temporary travel ban on Muslims. Last week, Trump tweeted a photo of himself with a taco salad and the words 'I love Hispanics!” on Cinco de Mayo, a Mexican holiday commemorating a military victory over French forces in the 1862 Battle of Puebla.
Supporters defend Trump's travel ban and taco tweet as concern for U.S. security and a sincere overture to Hispanics. But some GOP leaders continue to warn that his candidacy will end any hope of Republicans winning over minorities.
'Eating a taco is probably not going to fix the problem we have with Hispanics,” Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., told CNN last week in response to the tweet. 'Embracing Donald Trump is embracing demographic death.”
The work by Monterroso's nonpartisan group is part of the 'Stand Up to Hate” coalition that said Wednesday it helped 12,781 people apply for citizenship in several states in March and April. That is part of broader efforts by several groups, including the Democratic Party and Spanish-language broadcaster Univision, to help millions of people apply for citizenship or register to vote this year.
The rate of citizenship applications and voter registrations historically swells in the months leading up to a presidential election as state deadlines draw near. But this year's increased activity comes as demographers anticipate that this will be the most racially and ethnically diverse election in U.S. history. Nearly a third of eligible voters will be racial minorities, due mostly to growth among Hispanics, according to the Pew Research Center.
Increases are also happening in battleground states with smaller but growing blocs of Hispanic voters that Democrats hope can help them win local, statewide and congressional races. In Iowa, labor leaders believe that five times as many Hispanics voted in presidential caucuses this year compared with 2008.
Albert Morales, a former Democratic National Committee operative who handled Hispanic issues, called the latest trends 'a very positive development.” But he warned that Democrats and like-minded groups need to spend millions more to register and mobilize Hispanics voters if they want to win more congressional races.
Monterroso, 58, immigrated from Guatemala in 1977 and has devoted his career to registering Hispanics to become citizens and vote. He said that the GOP's embrace of Trump is 'scary,” but that increased Latino registrations 'is music to my ears.”
A man holds up a 'Trumps Life Matters' t-shirt following a U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump campaign rally in Syracuse, New York April 16, 2016 REUTERS/Carlo Allegri