The Democratic National Committee will be gaveled in today to formally nominate President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden for a second term. The DNC Convention Delegates and state Delegations reflect such a diverse group of people of all walks of life that represent the national Democratic Party. Further this convention will reflect the milestone that Latinos have achieved as Texas Mayor Julian Castro of San Antonio becomes the first Latino ever to serve as the Keynote Speaker at a DNC Convention. Introducing Mayor Castro, is his twin Democratic Nominee for Congress and State Representative Joaquin Castro of San Antonio. Today, the nation and world will meet two young rising stars in the Democratic Party at the 2012 DNC Convention. They are close like the Kennedy brothers, but one is older by only minutes. Their humble roots hardly reflect the Standford and Harvard education they both achieved together. Their mother Rosie Castro, is the foundation in their young lives, as America and the world are introduced to the Castro twins.
Mayor Julian Castro is now in the category of Texas legends. He is the third
Texan to serve as Keynote Speaker of the DNC, his predecessors are Congresswoman
Barbara Jordon, and Governor Ann Richards. Barbara Jordan was a politician and a leader
of the Civil Rights movement who became the first African American elected to
the Texas Senate after Reconstruction and the first southern black female elected
to the United States House of Representatives. Governor Ann Richards was the
45th Governor of Texas and the second female governor of Texas. Richards first came to the national political
arena as the state treasurer of Texas, when she delivered the keynote address
at the 1988 Democratic National Convention. Today, history is made once again.
Juan Sepulveda
also of San Antonio has led the leadership at the DNC for Latino outreach for
the convention and this is proving to be a big convention for Latinos at the DNC. The DNC has increased political participation
and engagement of Latinos in the party at all levels. At this convention, every record of Hispanic
convention participation has been broken.
This includes: naming Mayor
Antonio Villaraigosa of Los Angeles, California as Democratic National
Convention Chair, and naming San
Antonio, Texas Mayor Julian Castro as
Convention Keynote Speaker, two key positions for the Democratic National
Convention.
In addition the following reflects the outreach and
leadership positions of Latinos in the Democratic Party and for the 2012 DNC
Convention:
*Los Angeles, California City Councilman Eric Garcetti serving as Chair of
Democratic Municipal Officials (representing city council members, mayors, and
other municipal elected officials),
*Record number of Latinos participating in the2012
convention—there are 759+ Delegates, Alternates, or standing committee members
to the convention in 2012 (a new record); there were 658 in 2008 (a record
then),
*There are a Record number of Latinos named as national
members of the 2012 Convention Standing Committees—Chairwoman Congresswoman
Debbie Wasserman Schultz appointed 19 Latinos of 75 national positions, over
25% of spots. For the first time more
than ten Hispanic leaders have been appointed to national spots on the
convention standing committees. Past
Democratic conventions had anywhere from 0 to 7 Hispanics nominated to these
positions,
*Record number of
Hispanics named to leadership positions for 2012 Convention Standing
Committees—5 of 18 positions, nearly 28% of spots,
*Five Latino leaders have been selected to the 18 leadership
positions of the 2012 Platform, Credentials and Rules Committees. In 2012, nearly 28% of the Convention
Committee leadership positions will be held by Latinos;
· Credentials
Committee Co-Chair, San Antonio,
Texas Mayor Julian Castro
· Credentials
Committee Vice-Chair, Nevada State
Assemblywoman Lucy Flores
· Platform
Committee Vice-Chair, Colorado State
Representative Crisanta Duran
Platform
Committee Vice-Chair, Futuro Fund
Co-Chair Andres Lopez of Puerto Rico
· Rules
Committee Vice-Chair, Los Angeles,
California City Councilman Eric Garcetti
·
Two Latino leaders were also named to the Platform Drafting Committee: Stanford Law School Professor Tino Cuellar and New Organizing Institute Special Projects Director Carlos Odio.
Two Latino leaders were also named to the Platform Drafting Committee: Stanford Law School Professor Tino Cuellar and New Organizing Institute Special Projects Director Carlos Odio.
In addition, a record number of
Hispanic national organizations are attending the 2012 Convention (in
comparison to only 5 groups attending in 2008); 43 organizations accepted the
invitation to participate in the 2012 convention (this was the first time most
of these organizations have been asked to attend a Democratic National
Convention). The list includes: the National
Association of Latino Elected & Appointed Officials, Hispanic Federation, National Assoc. of
Hispanic Federal Executives, National Council of La Raza,· National Hispanic Caucus of State
Legislators, National Hispanic Foundation for the Arts, National Puerto Rican
Coalition, Inc., US Hispanic Chamber of Commerce, SER- Jobs for Progress
National, Inc., U.S.- Mexico Foundation, Hispanic Heritage Foundation,
Hispanic-Net, National Association of Hispanic Nurses, U.S. Hispanic Leadership
Institute, New America Alliance, Voto Latino, Mi Familia Vota,· National Hispanic Corporate Council,
Nat’l Assoc. of Hispanic Real Estate Professionals, Latino Leaders Network, Aspira, The Hispanic Institute, National
Hispanic Leadership Agenda, National Hispanic Medical Association, National
Association of Hispanic Publications, National Hispanic Media Coalition, National Immigration Forum, Labor
Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA), National Hispanic Council on
Aging, Colorado Immigration Coalition, National Society of Hispanic MBA's,
Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute, Latinos in Social Media, Chirla (Los Angeles),
AARP, Multicultural Markets & Engagement, North American Integration &
Development Center, New York Immigration Coalition,Hispanics in Philanthropy, League of
United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), MANA, A National Latino Organization, Southwest
Voter Registration and Education Project, National Conference of Puerto Rican
Women, and the United Farm Workers (UFW).
The Obama Administration and the Democrats have demonstrated
their commitment to public policy initiatives and causes that positively impact
the greater Latino community. This
election has been considered “the” election where Latinos can flex their
political muscle and influence the outcome if not determine who the next
President will be. But although polls show 70’% of Latinos support Obama, the challenge
continues to be to get out the Latino vote. In addition the Latino vote in
Florida, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico and other battleground states can determine
who is elected president.
The unprecedented outreach by the political arm of the Obama
Administration is unmatched by the Republican National Committee, and reflects
the commitment by the Obama Administration to include Latinos in all facets of
political activism which results in political empowerment and policy
initiatives that reflect the needs of the greater Latino community. This is not tokenism or political propping. This is a major step forward.
The Keynote Speaker address
by San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro is tonight!
Don’t miss it! It is on prime time
and will be on every network, if not – you must go to CNN for their live coverage.
CNN Democratic Convention Coverage
Fox News DNC Convention Coverage
MSNBC DNC Convention
Huffington Post DNC Convention Coverage
Politico DNC Convention Coverage
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