Compton Latinos go to court to revamp elections
Compton Latinos go to court to revamp elections
- January 19, 2011
- Louis DeSipio, Chicano/Latino studies department chair and political science associate professor, was a featured guest on 89.1 KPCV's Pat Morrison show January 18, 2011
From KPCV:
60% of Compton is Latino and yet, no Latino has ever held a city office. 8 Latinos
have run for city council since 1969, but none were victorious in the traditionally
African-American community. Today, three Latinos from the Latino Chamber of Commerce
are taking Compton to court to combat what they argue is racially polarized voting.
They are suing the city under the California Voting Rights act and if they win, they
want to restructure the city council elections through a complicated redistricting
process that would give more opportunity to Latino and minority candidates. Compton’s
city council is chosen at large, and where there is racially polarized voting, that
can mean few opportunities for minority candidates. Today’s debate echoes the one
that took place decades ago, before White Flight and political organizing put the
political power in the hands of Compton’s black residents. A move to district-elections
has opened the doors to minorities in cities like San Francisco and throughout the
South but is it the answer in a city like Compton with only a 7% voter turnout? Is
a move to district elections the answer or is the problem more fundamental than that?
Guests include Louis Desipio, Associate Professor of Political Science and Chicano/Latino
Studies at UC Irvine and Joaquin Avila, attorney for the Latino voters in the Compton
case; Director, National Voting Rights Advocacy Initiative at Seattle University School
of Law.
For a recording of the broadcast, visit http://www.scpr.org/programs/patt-morrison/2011/01/18/compton-election-s....
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