A third experience of the political foundation was an appearance of a civic work within Latinos compared to African Americans. Latinos had less civic networks compared to blacks in this era. “The VRA is nevertheless the first pillar of contemporary Latino politics: a statutory recognition of a political community united by shared exclusion, particularly linguistic exclusion.” In 1975 many Latinos had organizations of politics, but they weren’t mixed nationally for the most part. Also in 1975 there were extensions within the VRA, a well known shared history with political exclusion. This was mostly based with from the language …show more content…
There are initial state efforts to incorporate and exclude Latino populations. Having manipulation and neglect in Latino politics has only created barriers for Latinos. Mexican-Americans and Puerto Ricans have poorer civic networks than blacks did back in the mid twenties. In the past twenty years, non- Cuban to be specific, define themselves as Latino rather than identifying to a specific origin. I think this has happened because many Latinos share the same struggles and experiences, therefore them uniting creates a stronger foundation by working together since they share common experiences. Over the years there have been dramatic changes in the configuration of Latino population. There has also been a shared interest among Latinos of different origins and ancestries in Latino politics. VRA is the first pillar of contemporary Latino politics. They have a united community, common exclusions, the most common exclusion is linguistic. Although it may not seem as if Latinos are becoming more involved because of the exclusion, neglect, and hardships they are faced with, Latinos are becoming more aware and involved individuals. Latino votes have gone up a drastic amount starting from 1988 having only 3.7 percent then fast forwarding to 2012 and having it go up by 10