Asian-American voters must figure out how to make their numbers count

Published: 8:30pm, 23 Sep 2024Updated: 9:19pm, 23 Sep 2024

As the United States heads into the 2024 presidential election, the Asian-American and Pacific Islander community is justifiably proud of its achievements. It has an AAPI presidential candidate in Vice-President Kamala Harris. It is the nation’s fastest-growing ethnic group, having doubled its numbers between 2000 and 2022. And it is gaining political muscle with a rising number of lawmakers in Congress.

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But in a nation where identity politics reigns, the community of 24 million has some fundamental political weaknesses it must overcome to claim its rightful slice of the American pie – starting with an identity problem.

While mainstream American society does not lump all European-Americans in one basket, it does with Asian-Americans, although they trace their roots to more than 40 countries accounting for 60 per cent of the global population.

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Although Asians have lived in the United States since before its creation, most kept a low political profile for centuries amidst pervasive racism. With a political awakening after the 1965 passage of landmark immigration legislation, the term “Asian-American” term was born – credited to a Chinese and a Japanese graduate student at the University of California, Berkeley – bolstering visibility and replacing the commonly used, racist “Orientals”.

A half-century on, however, the term’s shortcomings have only become more apparent. While there is a growing appreciation of distinct Asian cultures among mainstream Americans, 60 per cent of AAPIs say they’re still viewed as monolithic “Asians” in casual contact.

  

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