9:04 am By Maegan La Mala · Blogs|Immigration|Media|Obama · 1 Comment
1 Jul 2010President Obama was credited with using online participatory tools to make some people feel like they had a role in his election campaign and now in his presidency. The White House is keeping up appearances and invites us all to submit questions post Obama’s speech on immigration this morning.
From the White House:
After the speech, we will also host a unique online engagement event – what we’re calling an “Open for Questions Roundtable” – with Cecilia Muñoz, one of the President’s closest advisors on the issue. Representatives from online media outlets examining several angles of the immigration issue will be there posing the questions on the minds of their readers — Forbes, which focuses on business and economic issues; the Examiner.com network which has citizen reporters in every state including more than 50 border state communities; CNET which focuses on the tech community; and Univision.com, which has covered the immigration debate as closely as anybody for years. And as we always do, we’ll be taking some of your questions live via Facebook as well.
Earlier this morning, as all of us Latino and other immigration bloggers mentally prepared ourselves for the task at hand, it was noticed that all of the “online” news outlets were actually fairly traditional news outlets, nothing really independent like say bloggers were represented.
But no matter there is the live White House Feed and we can all submit questions here, where apparently all the anti’s have camped out already. It’s just like being on a roundtable, right?
In the olden days, aka the days of Dick Cheney and guns and random shooting of old men, ducks avoided the White House like the Plague.
These days, mami’s feel perfectly fine herding up the brood and heading in for a visit.
Yes, change has truly come
10:49 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · New Mexico|Politics · 7 Comments
9 Nov 2006
New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson was overwhelmingly re-elected this week with a whopping 68% of votes cast in his favor. Richardson (born in Mexico City born in Pasadena, raised in Mexico City, son of an American father and a Mexican mother), is the only Latino governor in the United States and las malas lenguas say he’s going to try to run for President in 2008. With the recent shift in public support toward the Democrats, could Richardson pull off on a national level what he pulled off in his own state?
Hefty majorities of men and women, Anglos and Hispanics, all age and income groups backed Richardson, according to the exit poll.The governor also won the political middle ground. Majorities of moderates and independents favored Richardson. Those groups are considered key swing voters in New Mexico elections. About a third of conservatives defected from Dendahl and backed Richardson, according to the survey of voters as they left polling places across the state.
In spite of a relatively liberal philosophy on immigration (he’s reviled by anti-immigrant organizations) and other hot button issues, Richardson seems to have pulled from all walks of life and political affiliations to get this win, which is the kind of appeal that could make him a great candidate for the White House.
Would the Democratic party get behind a Latino candidate for President? And is this country ready for a Latino president? Tell us what you think.
Via / El Paso Times
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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