You could say that Latinos in the United States have been betting on the numbers. In the decades leading up to the 2010 census, countless politicos, academics, community organizers, and others in the Latino community predicted that a swelling population and growing prominence would bring power and respect.
It was widely assumed that, at some point, the Latino population would become so large and its influence on everything from business to sports to food to pop culture so profound that it would be impossible to ignore. However, Latinos learned in the first decade of the 21st century that—given their scarcity in numbers in law, business, media, academia, publishing, and entertainment (among other professions)—sometimes they are invisible. In a country that still defines racial and ethnic relations in terms of black and white, those who fit into neither category are often ignored.
In August 2011 Time magazine compiled a list of what its editors called the “100 All-TIME 100 Best Nonfiction Books” that had been written in English since Time had begun publishing in 1923. The list included books written by, and about, women, gays, African Americans, Asian Americans, and others. Yet there were no books by, or even about, Latinos on that list. It was a startling omission—especially since, just a few months earlier, Time had, along with other media, reported on the release of data from the 2010 U.S. census. That census showed that there were 50 million Latinos living in all 50 states, that they constituted 16 percent of the U.S. population, and that they accounted for more than half of the growth of the country’s total population between 2000 and 2010. Latinos are everywhere, except on Time’s list of essential reading. (For further details on the 2010 U.S. census and Latinos, see Hispanics in the United States: The U.S. Census of 2010.)
This kind of snub can’t be what Henry Cisneros, the first Latino to serve as the mayor of a major U.S. city in the 20th century and who served as the secretary of housing and urban development (1993–97) under Pres. Bill Clinton, had in mind when, in the 1980s as mayor of San Antonio, Texas, he helped convene a gathering of Latino leaders drawn from the worlds of business, politics, and nonprofit organizations. The assembled issued a policy paper and referred to the 1980s as “The Decade of the Hispanic.” Looking back, however, that declaration was overly optimistic and a tad premature.
Only in the 1980s were Hispanics in the United States beginning to come into their own—surprising, given that Hispanic servicemen had already racked up scores of medals in World War I, World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. There had already been Hernandez v. Texas (1954), a unanimous landmark U.S. Supreme Court case that recognized that the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the law extended to Mexican Americans (the conviction of agricultural labourer Pete Hernandez for murder was quashed because Mexican Americans had been barred from participating in both the jury that indicted and the jury that convicted him). There had already been a United Farm Workers of America union (founded in 1962 as the National Farm Workers Association by Cesar Chavez) and a Chicano civil rights movement. Those victories were the bricks that laid the foundation for major breakthroughs in the 1980s. Cisneros was elected mayor of San Antonio in 1981, Federico Peña was elected mayor of Denver in 1983, and Xavier Suarez was elected mayor of Miami in 1985. Lauro Cavazos became the first Latino cabinet member when Pres. Ronald Reagan appointed him education secretary in 1988.
The doors to political power appeared to be flying open. It’s no wonder Hispanic leaders felt such optimism about the future as the 1980s came to a close. By the beginning of the 21st century, however, the notion of a Hispanic decade seemed almost quaint. With Latinos expected to account for as much as 30 percent of the U.S. population by 2050, it’s perhaps time to think in terms of the “Century of the Hispanic.”
As Latinos moved into the second decade of the 21st century and beyond, they would be faced with a mixture of obstacles and opportunities. The biggest obstacles that faced Latinos centred on education, politics, demographics, economics, and immigration.
These obstacles are formidable but can be overcome. Once that happens, the opportunities for Latinos to contribute—or, more rightly, to continue to contribute—to the United States will be endless. After all, Hispanics are not exactly new arrivals to the land that now occupies the United States. Hispanics have been living in cities such as Santa Fe, New Mexico, for more than four centuries. They are part of the national fabric. They are not going anywhere. They will continue to make their mark in a variety of fields and leave the place better than they found it. That is the American way.