在改革时代的十字路口:医疗保健和移民改革对拉丁裔支持奥巴马总统和国会的影响

Gabriel R. Sanchez, Jillian Medeiros, Shannon Sanchez-youngman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

奥巴马政府承诺改革美国两项失败的政策体系;移民和医疗保健。奥巴马政府面临着移民人口的快速增长,以及缺乏一套统一的政策和计划来帮助快速增长的移民人口的社会、经济和政治整合,包括缺乏关于移民公民身份途径的共识(Singer 2009)。此外,当代医疗保健系统受到不断上升的成本、经济和与获取和质量相关的差距的困扰,美国也有快速增长的无保险人口(OECD 2008)。拉丁裔人口对这两个关键政策领域的态度尤为重要,原因如下。首先,39.8%的拉丁裔社区是在外国出生的(皮尤西班牙裔中心2009年),28%的拉丁裔至少有一位在外国出生的父母(苏罗和帕塞尔2003年),这使得移民政策成为许多拉丁裔人的一个突出问题。其次,与美国其他种族和族裔群体相比,拉丁美洲人的未参保率最高,拥有雇主医疗保险的比例最低(James, Thomas, llie- blanton, and Garfield, 2007)。虽然研究人员认识到这两项政策对拉丁裔社区的重要性,但研究尚未调查当前公众对这两项政策的看法,更重要的是,这些态度是否影响了拉丁裔对现任政府的支持。为了填补文献中的这一空白,我们使用2009年拉丁裔决定调查来研究拉丁裔关于医疗保健和移民改革的民意如何影响拉丁裔对奥巴马总统和国会的支持。我们发现这两项政策对拉丁裔对奥巴马总统和国会的支持很重要。这表明拉丁美洲人的支持本质上是政治性的,是政策驱使他们支持现任政府。鉴于拉丁裔选民在2008年大选中发挥了至关重要的作用,这两项政策改革的成功可能对2010年和2012年的选举产生重大影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
At the Cross-Roads of a Reform Era: The Impact of Health Care and Immigration Reform on Latino Support for President Obama and Congress
The Obama administration has pledged to reform two failing policy systems in the United States; immigration and health care. The Obama administration is faced with the rapid growth of the immigrant population, and a lack of uniform set of policies and programs to aid in the social, economic, and political incorporation of this rapidly growing immigration population, including a lack of consensus about a path of citizenship for immigrants (Singer 2009). Furthermore, the contemporary health care system is plagued with escalating costs, economic and disparities related to access and quality, and there is also a rapidly growing uninsured population in the United States (OECD 2008). The Latino populations’ attitudes toward these two critical policy areas are particularly relevant for several reasons. First, 39.8% of the Latino community is foreign-born (Pew Hispanic Center 2009) and 28% of Latinos have at least one foreign-born parent (Suro and Passel 2003), making immigration policy a salient issue for many Latinos. Second, Latinos have the highest uninsured rates, and the lowest percentage of people with employer coverage health insurance when compared to other racial and ethnic groups in the United States (James, Thomas, Lillie-Blanton, and Garfield 2007). While researchers recognize the significance of these two policies for the Latino community, studies have yet to examine current public opinion toward these two policies, and more importantly whether these attitudes affect Latino support of the current administration. In order to fill this gap in the literature we use the 2009 Latino Decisions survey of Latinos to examine how Latino public opinion regarding health care and immigration reform affects Latino support of President Obama and Congress. We find that these two policies are significant in Latino support of President Obama and Congress. This shows that Latinos support is political in nature with policies driving their support of the current administration. Given the vital role the Latino electorate played during the 2008 election, the success of these two policy reform efforts may have major implications for the 2010 and 2012 elections.
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