Latinos are the second largest group of voters in the United States, and each year, 1 million become eligible to cast ballots. As with any community that has long faced discrimination—and attacks on their voting rights—the challenge has been to expand registration and increase Election Day impact.
Numerous organizations have embraced the Latino voting rights mission, working to amplify the many voices of this population—which, far from being homogenous, is diverse both racially and by country of origin. Most of the groups emerged in the mid-1960s and ’70s, strongly inspired by the Black civil rights movement and, in some cases, assisted by its leadership.
Until that time, according to a 2009 study of racial voting rights in America by the National Historic Landmarks Program, Hispanic Americans were consumed with other civil rights battles—from school segregation and citizenship challenges to housing and employment discrimination. But in 1965, the national Voting Rights Act elevated political participation on their agenda. By 1975, Latino groups had successfully lobbied for an amendment to that law, which specifically lifted barriers to non-English-speaking voters.
Here are six groups that historically made a significant impact on growing and empowering the Latino electorate: