CONTACTAbout UsCAREER OPPORTUNITIESADVERTISE WITH USPRIVACY POLICYPRIVACY PREFERENCESTERMS OF USELEGAL NOTICE
© 2025 Equal Entertainment LLC.
All Rights reserved
All Rights reserved
By continuing to use our site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
We need your help
Your support makes The Advocate's original LGBTQ+ reporting possible. Become a member today to help us continue this work.
Your support makes The Advocate's original LGBTQ+ reporting possible. Become a member today to help us continue this work.
Democratic presidential candidates say they are reaching out to Hispanics--a group that could play a key role in Iowa's caucuses But apparently they need to stretch a little further. Most Hispanics say they didn't know they were being courted.
''I don't see anything,'' says Sam Carbajal, who works for the school district in Marshalltown, a farming and manufacturing town in central Iowa.
It's the same to the east in Cedar Rapids, said Jesse Martinez, a field organizer with the Eastern Iowa Coalition for Comprehensive Immigration Reform.
''I haven't seen any outreach [of candidates] coming into the community,'' Martinez said. ''That's the general consensus...when are they going to come talk to us? So far, nothing.''
Nevertheless, with immigration reform emerging as one of the top issues of the 2008 campaign, Democrats say Iowa's small but growing Hispanic population could turn out for Iowa's first-in-the-nation presidential caucuses. In a close contest Hispanics could make the difference in who finishes first.
Among candidates' efforts to win Hispanic support:
-Illinois senator Barack Obama has a full-time staffer in charge of Hispanic outreach efforts, and he has hosted meetings and conference calls with leaders in the community. Spokesman Tommy Vietor calls it ''a concerted effort to reach out to Latino organizations and voters in Iowa.''
-New Mexico governor Bill Richardson, who was raised in Mexico City, has hired bilingual staffers and directed them toward regions of Iowa with significant Hispanic populations. ''We are focusing considerable attention on parts of the state with larger Hispanic populations and we're making sure the Hispanic population knows the governor is one of them,'' said spokesman Tom Reynolds.
-New York senator Hillary Rodham Clinton will soon release a list of Hispanic leaders in Iowa who support her campaign, said Iowa spokeswoman Stephanie Bjornson. The campaign earlier named a national Hispanic Leadership Council that included two Iowans--union leader Miguel Moreno and Alfred Ramirez, executive director of the Cedar Rapids nonprofit group Diversity Focus.
One difficulty campaigns face in reaching Hispanic voters is that Iowa's relatively small Hispanic population is scattered in burgs and hamlets throughout the state, rather than concentrated in a few communities.
Iowa has an estimated 114,700 Hispanics, making up less than 4% of the state's population. In 2004, when the number of Hispanics was somewhat smaller, the U.S. Census estimated that 24,000 Hispanics in the state were U.S. citizens and 13,000 were registered to vote. That year, the census estimated that 12,000 Hispanics voted.
Still, the Hispanic population is up 39% since 2000 as immigrants move to Iowa, drawn by work in meatpacking plants and other blue-collar jobs.
Though the community is small, the attention given to the state's Hispanics reflects the political reality that with so many candidates seeking the Democratic nomination, building an edge within any group could provide the margin of victory.
Armando Villareal, administrator of the Iowa Division of Latino Affairs, said campaigns and Hispanic leaders are working to register Hispanic voters. He estimated that Hispanics could comprise up to 15% of caucus-goers.
But it will take an aggressive outreach effort to come close to that figure, and Martinez, the Cedar Rapids field organizer, isn't seeing it.
Martinez expressed frustration that the parties and candidates haven't done more to register Hispanic voters and explain how the state's caucus system works. Iowa's precinct caucuses may attract hordes of candidates and extended media coverage, but the event remains a mystery to many people new to the state.
''[Hispanics] just don't know what to do,'' Martinez said. ''I'm only one person and I can't teach everybody, and that's where it's the campaigns' responsibility to start training and educating their potential voters of what a caucus is.''
Rolando Gaytan, a computer engineering student at Iowa State University who works in his parents' grocery store in Marshalltown every weekend, said he can't understand why Democratic candidates haven't made a harder push for Hispanic votes.
Gaytan said he usually votes Republican but thinks discontent among many Hispanics over the failed immigration reform effort in Congress could spur many to attend the caucuses and support Democratic candidates. The immigration measure failed in large part due to Republican opposition.
So far, though, Gaytan hasn't heard of any Democrats trying to rally Hispanics. Although his parents' store is just down the street from a county Democratic Party office, no one has asked him to post party fliers or candidate information.
''You'd think they'd target the Hispanic businesses with posters and whatnot but we haven't gotten anything from anyone,'' he said.
Working from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. most days, Marshalltown bakery owner Marcelina Neria Ceniceros said she hasn't had time to learn much about the presidential candidates. Before she attends the caucuses, she'll carve out some time to catch up on the candidates, but she'd appreciate some help.
''How is the Hispanic community going to get involved if you're not involving them?'' she asked
About 80 miles away in Perry, where Hispanics make up a quarter of the population, community organizer Eddie Diaz said he thinks candidates still have time to connect with Hispanics. He said their intentions should become clearer after several upcoming events, such as next month's Latino Heritage Festival in Des Moines.
''If you see candidates at those things,'' Diaz said, ''then you'd see them targeting the general community more than they are right now.'' (Nafeesa Syeed, AP)
From our Sponsors
Most Popular
Bizarre Epstein files reference to Trump, Putin, and oral sex with ‘Bubba’ draws scrutiny in Congress
November 14 2025 4:08 PM
True
Jeffrey Epstein’s brother says the ‘Bubba’ mentioned in Trump oral sex email is not Bill Clinton
November 16 2025 9:15 AM
True
Gay makeup artist Andry Hernández Romero describes horrific sexual & physical abuse at CECOT in El Salvador
July 24 2025 10:11 AM
True
Watch Now: Pride Today
Latest Stories
A heart filled with trans hate is how Marjorie Taylor Greene is choosing to be remembered
December 20 2025 10:00 AM
Trump's FDA sends warning letters to companies selling chest binders
December 19 2025 2:31 PM
Bowen Yang to leave SNL after Ariana Grande and Cher episode
December 19 2025 2:10 PM
Notorious anti-LGBTQ+ New York Archbishop Dolan retires — here are his worst moments
December 19 2025 1:27 PM
Sarah McBride knew some Democrats would betray trans people, so she lobbied Republicans
December 19 2025 12:55 PM
Creating Change Returns to Washington D.C. for 38th Convening for LGBTQ Advocacy
December 19 2025 12:22 PM
House passes bill banning Medicaid from covering gender-affirming care for youth
December 19 2025 11:05 AM
Health policy expert to RFK Jr.: You can't ban trans youth care this way
December 18 2025 5:37 PM
12 lesbian thrillers and mysteries to binge & where to watch them
December 18 2025 4:36 PM
Netflix's 'Boots' season 2 plot revealed by producer amid cancelation
December 18 2025 4:33 PM
Charlie Kirk's accused killer, Tyler Robinson, on LGBTQ+ issues: It's complicated
December 18 2025 4:04 PM
Sacramento man still in coma six weeks after suspected anti-LGBTQ+ hate crime
December 18 2025 1:17 PM
RFK Jr. and Dr. Oz announce sweeping measures to ban gender-affirming care for trans youth
December 18 2025 12:19 PM
True
Texas city will remove rainbow crosswalks under orders from Trump administration
December 18 2025 11:07 AM
Six key takeaways from Trump's speech to the nation, including 'transgender for everybody'
December 17 2025 10:51 PM
Marjorie Taylor Greene’s bill criminalizing gender-affirming care for minors passes with Democrats’ support
December 17 2025 6:47 PM
True
I didn’t just run the world’s major marathons. I changed them
December 17 2025 4:31 PM
Pam Bondi wants FBI to offer bounties for ‘radical gender ideology’ groups, leaked memo shows
December 17 2025 3:17 PM
Trending stories
Recommended Stories for You

































































Charlie Kirk DID say stoning gay people was the 'perfect law' — and these other heinous quotes