Yegparian: A New Poll Tax?

Did you read about the goings-on in the small Arizona town of San Luis, abutting the Mexican border? A new technology of disenfranchisement seems to have been discovered. And, it seems the Latinos have pulled a page from the Armenian book of undercutting one another.

Alejandrina Cabrera is now an erstwhile city council candidate because the Arizona Supreme Court affirmed a Superior Court judge’s ruling that her name be struck from the ballot because her English skills are insufficient. An Arizona government entity taking action that disenfranchises Latinos—who could imagine such a thing happening?

Cabrera has been politically active in her town, including being involved in two recall campaigns of council members (the town has had 24 attempted recalls since 2001, 7 of them successful). Clearly, this is a very rough political environment.

In this no-holds-barred atmosphere, Mayor Juan Carlos Escamilla, who opposes her, filed a lawsuit challenging her eligibility, and the city council later used city funds to pursue the case (that alone elicits a “hmmmm”). Judge John Nelson had a professor test Cabrera’s English. The egghead, William Eggington of Brigham Young University, found her skills to be at a “survival” level, so the judge disqualified her.

A few background facts are necessary for a full picture. San Luis is over 98 percent Latino. Most interactions are in Spanish. Previous council members have had a similarly weak command of English; one is even quoted in the LATimes (“Arizona English-fluency case upheld,” Feb. 8, p.A6; this was the second item the paper carried about this story) saying his English was at a level similar to Cabrera’s when he was first elected.

Looking at this from the outside, it’s easy to snicker at the bitterness of the political clashes in San Luis, which have opened the door to those with far more sinister motives to dislodge candidates for electoral offices that matter a lot more than a small town’s city council.

But, this is how the Armenian community is perceived when incompetent or otherwise unelectable Armenians put forth their candidacy in places like Glendale, undermining others’ chances at election to the city council, school board, state or federal legislative office, etc. And, it doesn’t matter whether the damaging behavior is self-actuated or instigated/egged-on by cynical non-Armenian political operatives working to get their preferred candidate(s) elected. The result is the same—harm to the Armenian or Latino (as the case may be) community’s interests.

This example of judicial interference is also frightful. If it involved some other matter, particularly some right-wing wedge issue, the reactionary end of the American political spectrum would have been up in arms about “judicial activism.” Yet, there seems to be silence about this travesty. A citizen is being robbed of the right to stand for election, and there is no furor. Possibly because she’s a Latina and many want to suppress that growing sector of political clout. How loathsome is that?

This case provides the anti-immigrant forces in the American body politic with a very effective weapon. Don’t be surprised if the “language proficiency” weapon is turned against Armenians someday. All this is very similar to having an unaffordable poll tax to keep the poor and other “undesirable” elements from voting. Requiring literacy tests to vote are another analogy.

Speak up now and prevent this vile virus from spreading to other parts of the country. Prevent a petty local squabble from providing a basis to threaten many groups access to the ballot—this time, not to vote but to appear on it.

Garen Yegparian

Garen Yegparian

Asbarez Columnist
Garen Yegparian is a fat, bald guy who has too much to say and do for his own good. So, you know he loves mouthing off weekly about anything he damn well pleases to write about that he can remotely tie in to things Armenian. He's got a checkered past: principal of an Armenian school, project manager on a housing development, ANC-WR Executive Director, AYF Field worker (again on the left coast), Operations Director for a telecom startup, and a City of LA employee most recently (in three different departments so far). Plus, he's got delusions of breaking into electoral politics, meanwhile participating in other aspects of it and making sure to stay in trouble. His is a weekly column that appears originally in Asbarez, but has been republished to the Armenian Weekly for many years.
Garen Yegparian

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