February 28, 2011 | Texas Tribune | Original Article

Are Texas Hispanics Up for Grabs to the GOP?

Republican analysts say that as Texas' Hispanic population continues to surge, its traditionally Democratic electorate is more and more up for grabs. 

"The Hispanic culture [is one] that is pro-life, pro-family, pro-free enterprise, [that] values hard work and has a value structure that fits very nicely with the Republican Party," said Allen Blakemore, the owner of the Houston-based political strategy firm Blakemore & Associates.

But Democrats caution against that assessment. They see the increasingly divisive battle over immigration as a dividing line that will keep Hispanics squarely in their corner. 

The debate was part of Monday's Texas Tribune "New Day Rising" event, which took a closer look at the 2010 census numbers that gave Texas Hispanics 38 percent of the state's population.

James Aldrete, director of Message Audience & Presentation, a political communications agency, said the Republican Party's desire to conflate immigration and border security shows the party is sending mixed messages to Hispanics.

"There is nothing about checking the immigration status of children at school that has to do with border security," he said.

The surging Hispanic population will mean less if these voters continue to ignore the issues at the polls, where turnout among Hispanics has been traditionally low. Panelist Beth Hernandez, the director of The Pivot Group Texas, said that could have more to do with the average age of Hispanic Texans than with voter apathy.

"One of the reasons they don't vote is that most of them aren't old enough to," she said. She added that strategists must come together to define exactly how the well of untapped voters will be reached. Democrats could lose ground if they fail to do that, she said.

"It's our duty to figure this out," she said. "There needs to be more resources allocated to study what motivates Hispanics in Texas."

Asked by moderator and Tribune pollster Jim Henson what a strengthened Latino voter base would mean for a Hispanic in a statewide race, Hernandez said it depends on redistricting. Census figures indicate Hispanics alone account for 65 percent of the state's growth over the last 10 years. The new legislative maps should reflect that after the decennial redistricting that begins this session, she said

"It depends on if these seats are where the Hispanic population centers are," she said.

Asked by audience members who the Hispanic "rising stars" in the Republican Party are, the panel named Texas Supreme Court Justice Eva Guzman; state Reps. Larry Gonzales, R-Round Rock, and Jose Aliseda, R-Beeville; former Texas Solicitor General and candidate for U.S. Senate Ted Cruz; and George P. Bush. One audience member said that with respect to Guzman, her unwillingness or inability to pronounce her last name in Spanish could hurt her, as several voters in South Texas have commented on the matter.

State Rep. Rafael Anchia, D-Dallas; state Sen. Leticia Van de Putte, D-San Antonio; and San Antonio Mayor Julián Castro were also named as powerhouses in the Democratic Party.