Immigrants approved for citizenship walk in, take the oath of allegiance, and walk out as Americans — and as a small army of new voters. It’s extremely bad,” said Mike Madrid, a Sacramento-based GOP consultant who studies Latino voters. (Annie Mulligan / For The Times)At the presidential level, naturalized immigrants’ voting power is largely diluted by the electoral college. “The president’s got big problems in multiple segments, not just naturalized voters,” Bentz said. He doesn’t see himself as very politically engaged, but he plans to vote in 2020 — and definitely not for Trump.
Source: Los Angeles Times October 23, 2019 12:00 UTC