How Will John McCain Measure Up for Latinos?

June 18, 2008

Today, John McCain is meeting with Latino leaders in Illinois, and La Opinion, the largest Spanish-language daily, published an exclusive interview with the Republican candidate where he spoke about his position on various issues of importance to the Latino community.

While John McCain paints himself as a friend of the Latino community, the facts point otherwise. Read below to see how McCain really measures up for Latinos on the issues that matter to them:

Education:

Hispanics consistently rate education as a top priority, and with good reason: Latinos are less likely than their African-American and white peers to participate in early-childhood education programs. Recent estimates suggests that only 52 percent of Hispanic students graduate on time from high school and only 11 percent of adult Latinos in the United States have a college education compared with 25 percent of the total adult population.

McCain’s record on education:

Immigration:

Our immigration system is broken; there are 12 million people with undocumented status in the United States—among them 65,000 who came here as very young children.

McCain’s true record on immigration:

Economy:

Latinos are being disproportionately affected by the economic crisis. According to the most recent Hispanic Pew survey, the unemployment rate for Latinos reached 7.3 percent—much higher than for the general population. Among immigrants, it is even higher: 8.3 percent. On the housing front, a recent report by the Center for American Progress shows that nearly 60 percent of Hispanics were victims of predatory lending and had high-cost home-purchase loans (as opposed to only 18 percent for whites). The projected number of foreclosures on 2005 subprime loans for Latinos is nearly 111,000. Latinos are also being squeezed by gas prices as U.S. drivers are paying record prices to fill their tanks.

McCain’s plan for the economy:

Health Care:

Latinos represent the group with the highest uninsurance rates in the country. Nearly a third of the U.S. Latino population is without health insurance. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation’s most recent analysis of the 2000 Census, 34 percent of Hispanics are uninsured, compared with 22 percent of African Americans, 20 percent of Asian/Pacific Islanders, and 12 percent of whites. More than 3 million Hispanic children are uninsured, making up nearly 40 percent of all uninsured children.

McCain’s position on health care:

War in Iraq:

Hispanics have generally expressed a more negative view toward the war compared with the rest of the population. The latest Hispanic Pew Center survey, however, shows an even stronger opposition on the part of Latinos, especially when it comes to keeping troops in Iraq. There are 1.1 million Hispanic veterans of the U.S. armed forces, and still two out of every three Latinos now believe that U.S. troops should be brought home from Iraq as soon as possible. Only one in four think the U.S. made the right decision in using military force. The spending total for the war has continued to explode to the current figure of $600 billion (from US taxpayers' funds). That is $5,000 spent every second.

McCain on Iraq: