By ANTHONY ADVINCULA, New America Media
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Asian Americans can be a force to reckon with only if a majority of them exercise their right to vote in the upcoming election, according to Asian American elected officials at the Democratic National Convention.
Asian Americans are the fastest-growing minority group in the United States, but according to San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee, “We are still suffering from the 50 percent turnout as opposed to a bigger number of Asian voters. We need to increase this turnout in our community, especially in this election.”

Lee delivered his message at the convention’s Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Caucus.
In 2008, only 48 percent of AAPI registered voters cast a ballot, according to the latest census data. This turnout made them the lowest registered group of voters as compared to 62 percent of all Americans.
Lee, the first Asian American to be elected as San Francisco’s mayor, told the AAPI Caucus that Asian Americans — whether Japanese, Pakistani, Indian, Indonesian, Filipinos or Chinese — should expand their participation in the political process and “talk more about the important issues that address the needs of the Asian community.”
“We need to keep our doors open — to make our community more well represented,” he said.
Former Secretary of Transportation Norman Mineta concurred that if a majority of AAPI voters participate in the upcoming election, the group will have a significant impact, particularly on President Obama’s possible re-election in November.
“There are about 4.3 million AAPI registered voters — and 62 percent of them are Democrat registered voters,” Mineta said outside the room where the caucus was taking place. “If more and more of our voters come out during the election, [the] AAPI vote is going to be a marginal victory for the Democrats.”
The Obama campaign, Mineta added, could capitalize on the first-time AAPI voters since about 86 percent of them voted for Obama four years ago.
The AAPI Caucus was attended by several high-ranking elected officials from different states and cities, including Sen. Daniel Inouye of Hawaii, Rep. Mike Honda of San Jose and Rep. Judy Chu of El Monte. Second Lady Jill Biden and Maya Soetoro-Ng, Obama’s half-sister, also delivered short remarks during the two-hour convening.
But Peter Leung, a Chinese American delegate from Oregon, was less optimistic, commenting that AAPI votes are not crucial in U.S. elections.
“We don’t have that power yet — not in politics,” he said, sitting with fellow delegates during the caucus. “And we can’t achieve that power through conversations like this.”
Despite a growing population, Asian Americans still have a “small voice in politics,” he said, and thus need a bigger platform to empower and help them engage in national political activities.
“Even at this convention, the Asian caucus is clearly empty as compared to the Black and Latino caucuses,” Leung said. “I think Asians [did] not benefit from the civil rights movement. We care about science and technology, but not politics.”