Showing posts with label advocacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label advocacy. Show all posts

Sunday, March 29, 2026

Politics: The Italian American Vote

 


Politics: Italian Americans and Politics

Why We Never Became an Ethnic Voting Bloc — And Why That Might Be Our Strength

By The Italian Californian — Magazine Feature

Italian Americans helped build modern American cities, shaped labor movements, served in Congress, governed states, and influenced national policy. Yet unlike many other ethnic groups, Italian Americans never developed a unified political voting bloc.

There is no single “Italian American vote.”
No unified party.
No consistent ideological alignment.

And that’s not an accident — it’s history.


The Italian American Political Paradox

Italian Americans are politically visible — but not politically unified.

You can find Italian Americans across the entire political spectrum:

  • Conservatives
  • Liberals
  • Moderates
  • Independents
  • Populists
  • Urban machine politicians
  • Reformers
  • Labor leaders
  • Business conservatives

Unlike some ethnic communities, Italian Americans historically assimilated quickly and dispersed geographically. That made identity-based voting far less common.

Instead of “identity politics,” Italian Americans traditionally voted based on:

  • Class
  • Religion (Catholic social teaching)
  • Neighborhood interests
  • Labor vs. business
  • Law & order
  • Foreign policy
  • Personality and leadership

Ethnicity? Usually secondary.


Historical Context: Why Italian Americans Never Became a Voting Bloc

When millions of Italians arrived between 1880–1924, they faced discrimination:

  • Called “not quite white”
  • Stereotyped as criminals or anarchists
  • Lynched (notably New Orleans, 1891)
  • Paid lower wages
  • Segregated in housing and schools
  • Viewed as “clannish” and unassimilable
  • Anti-Catholic prejudice

Yet instead of forming ethnic political parties, Italian Americans integrated into existing political machines.

They joined:

  • Democratic urban machines (NYC, Chicago, Boston)
  • Republican business coalitions
  • Labor unions
  • Catholic civic organizations

They didn’t build separate political institutions — they entered mainstream ones.

This shaped everything that followed.


Early Italian American Political Leaders

Some of the earliest major Italian American political figures include:

Mayors and Urban Leaders

  • Fiorello La Guardia — Mayor of New York City
  • Angelo Rossi — Mayor of San Francisco
  • Joseph Alioto — Mayor of San Francisco
  • Carmen Policy — Los Angeles civic leader

Congressional Figures

  • Vito Marcantonio — Progressive Congressman (NY)
  • Peter Rodino — chaired Watergate hearings
  • Tip O’Neill ally and congressional leaders of Italian descent

Governors

  • Mario Cuomo — New York
  • Andrew Cuomo — New York
  • Ella Grasso — Connecticut
  • John Baldacci — Maine

These leaders did not run as “Italian American candidates.”
They ran as mainstream politicians.

That pattern continues today.


Italian Americans Today: Politically Everywhere

Modern Italian American politicians exist in both parties.

Republicans

  • Rudy Giuliani
  • Chris Christie
  • Ron DeSantis
  • Marco Rubio (Italian/Cuban heritage)
  • Tom Ridge

Democrats

  • Nancy Pelosi
  • Anthony Fauci (public policy leadership)
  • John Podesta
  • Andrew Cuomo
  • Joe Manchin (Italian heritage)

Bipartisan Observation

Italian Americans appear:

  • In leadership positions
  • In cabinet roles
  • In Congress
  • In state legislatures
  • In mayoral offices

But rarely as a coordinated ethnic bloc.


How Italian Americans Typically Vote

Polling consistently shows Italian Americans are politically split.

Historically:

Mid-20th Century:
Mostly Democratic (urban working class Catholics)

1980s–2000s:
Shift toward Republican candidates (Reagan Democrats)

Modern era:
Nearly evenly divided

Approximate political identification:

  • Democrat: ~35–40%
  • Republican: ~30–35%
  • Independent: ~20–30%

This is one of the most politically balanced ethnic groups in America.

Italian Americans don’t vote as a bloc — they vote as individuals.


Why Italian Americans Avoid Identity Politics

Several reasons explain this:

1. Rapid assimilation

Italian Americans became “mainstream” quickly.

2. Geographic dispersion

No single concentrated voting region

3. Regional differences

Northern Italians vs Southern Italians
Urban vs suburban
Catholic vs secular

4. Strong individualism

Italian American culture emphasizes:

  • family
  • independence
  • entrepreneurship
  • personal loyalty

Not collective political identity.


Italian American Political Organizations Today

Even without a voting bloc, Italian Americans do have advocacy organizations:

Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America (OSDIA)

  • Advocates for Italian American civil rights
  • Fights defamation and negative stereotyping
  • Promotes cultural education and public policy awareness

National Italian American Foundation (NIAF)

  • Based in Washington, D.C.
  • Engages directly with policymakers
  • Hosts conferences with political leaders
  • Advocates on U.S.–Italy relations and Italian American issues

Conference of Presidents of Major Italian American Organizations (COPOMIAO)

  • Coalition of major Italian American groups
  • Coordinates national advocacy efforts
  • Responds to media and political issues affecting the community

Italian American Congressional Delegation (informal)

  • Not an official caucus
  • Includes members of Congress of Italian descent
  • Occasionally collaborates on heritage-related initiatives

Other Italian American Political & Civic Groups

These groups focus more on:

  • cultural recognition
  • education
  • heritage issues
  • anti-defamation
  • diplomacy with Italy

Not coordinated voting.


My View: Maybe We Don’t Need a Voting Bloc — But We Do Need a Voice

Here’s where I stand.

I don’t think Italian Americans should turn into a rigid ethnic voting bloc.
That’s not who we are.

We’re too diverse.
Too independent.
Too assimilated.

But I do think we could benefit from:

👉 a stronger shared civic presence

Not to control elections —
but to preserve identity.


Where I Personally Stand as a Voter

I’ll always vote based on:

  • Policy
  • Values
  • Leadership

That comes first.

But I’ll also be honest — if two candidates align with my views, and one of them has a name that ends in a vowel… that’s a bonus.

It’s not decisive.
It doesn’t override policy.

But it matters.

It reflects:

  • Our history
  • Our contributions
  • Our place in American life

I won’t vote for someone just because they’re Italian American —
but I do take notice when they are.

And I think many of us do, even if we don’t say it out loud.


The Bottom Line

Italian Americans don’t do identity politics.

We never really have.

We don’t vote as a bloc.
We don’t follow one party.
We don’t coordinate politically.

But we do participate.

And maybe that’s the Italian American way:

Independent.
Assimilated.
Politically diverse.
But still aware of who we are.

Not a voting bloc.

Just a voice.

How You Can Get Involved

Building a Stronger Italian American Civic Voice

Italian Americans may not vote as a unified bloc — but we can still organize, advocate, and participate in ways that strengthen our cultural and civic presence.

If we are serious about preserving our history, improving representation, and ensuring our community is not overlooked, involvement matters.


 National Italian American Foundation (NIAF)

Focus: Public policy, education, civic engagement, U.S.–Italy relations

One of the most influential Italian American organizations in Washington, D.C., NIAF serves as a bridge between the Italian American community and policymakers.

What they do

  • Engage with Congress and national leaders
  • Promote Italian American education
  • Advocate for cultural recognition
  • Host leadership and policy forums

Website:
https://www.niaf.org



 Italian American Leadership Forum 

Focus: National civic leadership and policy engagement

Hosted by NIAF, this forum brings together:

  • Italian American elected officials
  • Policy experts
  • Community leaders
  • Business and cultural organizations

It serves as a national platform for discussing:

  • Representation in government
  • Public policy priorities
  • Cultural preservation
  • Civic engagement

Learn more:

https://www.ialforum.org/


 Italian American Future Leaders Conference

Focus: Developing the next generation of Italian American leaders

This independent initiative is focused on:

  • Students and young professionals
  • Future public servants and candidates
  • Community advocates
  • Emerging leaders

Topics include:

  • Civic engagement
  • Political leadership
  • Italian American identity
  • Public policy and advocacy

This is one of the most important developments in modern Italian American civic life — building a pipeline that historically did not exist.

Website:
https://iafuture.org


 UNICO National

Focus: Civic leadership, scholarships, and advocacy

One of the largest Italian American service organizations in the country, UNICO blends community service with civic engagement.

What they do

  • Provide scholarships
  • Promote Italian heritage
  • Support civic awareness
  • Engage in advocacy when needed

Website:
https://www.unico.org



 Order Sons and Daughters of Italy in America (OSDIA)

Focus: Civil rights, cultural preservation, anti-defamation

A historic organization that has long defended Italian American identity and reputation.

What they do

  • Fight negative stereotypes
  • Promote Italian American heritage
  • Provide scholarships
  • Advocate for cultural recognition

Website:
https://www.osdia.org



 Italian American One Voice Coalition

Focus: Anti-defamation and advocacy

This organization actively responds to:

  • Media portrayals
  • Public policy issues
  • Cultural misrepresentation

Website:
https://www.iaovc.org/


 National Italian American Congressional Delegation

Focus: Representation within the U.S. Congress

This informal bipartisan group of Italian American members of Congress collaborates on:

  • Heritage recognition
  • Cultural initiatives
  • Italian American issues
  • U.S.–Italy relations

While not a voting bloc, it represents Italian American presence at the highest levels of government.

US Representative & Co-Chair Rosa DeLauro
Contact | Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro

2413 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC  20515
Phone: (202) 225-3661
Fax: (202) 225-4890
59 Elm Street
New Haven, CT  06510
Phone: (203) 562-3718
Fax: (203) 772-2260


US Representative & Co-Chair Mike Rulli
Washington D.C. Office
421 Cannon House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515
Phone: (202) 225-5705

🏛️ Italian Caucus of California

Focus: Italian American representation in California public life

The Italian Caucus of California reflects ongoing efforts to build a more formal Italian American presence in state government.

Its goals include:

  • Promoting Italian American Heritage Month
  • Supporting education and curriculum inclusion
  • Preserving historic communities
  • Highlighting Italian American contributions

Key Contacts:

Get involved:

  • Contact caucus leaders
  • Encourage legislative support for Italian American initiatives
  • Advocate for cultural and educational recognition

 Conference of Presidents of Major Italian American Organizations (COPOMIAO)

Focus: National coordination and advocacy

A coalition that helps unify Italian American organizations on key issues:

  • Public policy
  • Cultural advocacy
  • Representation
  • National initiatives

Website:
https://copomiao.org/


 Why This Matters

Italian Americans historically:

  • Assimilated quickly
  • Avoided identity politics
  • Spread across parties
  • Prioritized independence

But that independence has come at a cost:

  • Limited collective influence
  • Reduced visibility
  • Underrepresentation in education and policy

Getting involved doesn’t mean becoming a voting bloc.

It means making sure our story is still told.


🧭 How You Can Help — Right Now

✔ Join NIAF, UNICO, or OSDIA
✔ Support the Italian American Future Leaders Conference
✔ Attend leadership forums and civic events
✔ Contact members of the Italian Caucus of California
✔ Reach out to Italian American members of Congress
✔ Advocate for Italian American education
✔ Support cultural preservation efforts
✔ Encourage younger Italian Americans to get involved


 Final Thought

Italian Americans don’t need to become a political machine.

But we also shouldn’t remain invisible.

We can be:

Independent — but engaged
Assimilated — but aware
American — but proudly Italian

Because in the end, civic participation isn’t about identity politics.

It’s about ensuring that our history, our contributions, and our voice
remain part of the American story.

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Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Issues: Stereotyping: The Godfather at 54 (2026): Myth, Memory, and the Reality of Italian-American Representation

 


The Godfather at 54 (2026): Myth, Memory, and the Reality of Italian-American Representation

The 2026 anniversary of The Godfather offers a timely opportunity to revisit a debate that has followed Italian Americans for more than half a century: Does the Mafia genre harm Italian-American identity, or has the concern become overstated—and perhaps even self-perpetuating?

When The Godfather premiered in 1972, it reshaped American cinema. It turned organized crime into epic drama, blending family, immigration, power, and tragedy into a Shakespearean narrative. The film—and the genre it helped define—cemented the Mafia as one of the most enduring storytelling frameworks in American culture. As one overview of crime storytelling notes, Mafia narratives resonate because they combine immigrant struggle, hierarchy, loyalty, and moral conflict—elements that naturally lend themselves to complex, character-driven stories.

But more than fifty years later, the conversation around Italian-American stereotyping deserves a more nuanced reassessment.


Is the Stereotyping Argument Overstated?

From my perspective, the idea that Mafia films meaningfully harm Italian Americans today is often exaggerated—and sometimes exploited. The argument that these stories create widespread discrimination doesn’t match lived reality in modern America.

No Italian American is being told:

  • “You can’t shop here—you might be in the Mob.”
  • “You’re Italian, so you must be a gangster.”
  • “We don’t hire Italians.”

That simply isn’t happening. The Italian-American community today is fully integrated, economically stable, and socially accepted. The notion that Hollywood mob movies are causing real-world discrimination feels disconnected from reality.

Yes, the jokes still exist. But even we Italian Americans make them—often affectionately. References to “the family,” “forget about it,” or “Don” are part of shared humor. And importantly, they’re jokes we can comfortably laugh at because our place in American society is secure. That’s not a sign of marginalization — it’s a sign of cultural confidence.


Modern Mafia Stories Are Not One-Sided

Another overlooked point: modern Mafia films are rarely glorified propaganda. If anything, they are cautionary tales.

  • The Godfather ends with moral isolation and family collapse
  • Goodfellas ends with betrayal and paranoia
  • Casino ends with destruction
  • The Sopranos depicts therapy, anxiety, and emptiness
  • The Irishman ends with loneliness and regret

These stories show consequences, not hero worship. They depict criminals as flawed, destructive, and morally compromised. That is not stereotyping — it’s storytelling grounded in realism.

Even the original cultural analysis acknowledges that Mafia narratives often focus on loyalty, betrayal, and moral conflict, presenting characters as complex anti-heroes rather than glorified villains.

In other words, the genre has matured. It no longer portrays mobsters as romantic heroes — but as tragic figures.


The Reality: The Mafia Was Part of Italian-American History

Another reason the genre persists is simple: it reflects something real. Organized crime did exist in parts of Italian-American history. Ignoring it would be dishonest.

For decades:

  • Mobsters denied the Mafia existed
  • Some advocacy groups denied it existed
  • Even federal authorities once hesitated to acknowledge it

But history proved otherwise. Pretending it never happened would be revisionism.

If Italian-American writers avoided the Mafia entirely, we would be removing one of the most dramatic and historically documented elements of our story. What would replace it? Sanitized narratives? Unrealistic portrayals? Cultural mythology disconnected from reality?

When I write about the Mafia, my goal is not to glorify it — but to present it honestly, as one thread within a much larger Italian-American experience.


A Double Standard Worth Discussing

Where I do agree with critics is the inconsistency across ethnic portrayals.

Consider:

  • How many Mafia films exist? Hundreds
  • How many films about Black or Latino street gangs? Far fewer
  • How many sitcom jokes about Mafia Italians? Many
  • How many jokes about other gangs in mainstream commercials? Almost none

There are films about Black and Latino gangs — but they are usually framed as social commentary, not mythic storytelling. They rarely become long-running franchises or cultural touchstones in the way Mafia stories do.

This creates a cultural imbalance:

  • Mafia figures become legendary anti-heroes
  • Other gangs are depicted primarily as social problems

That difference is real — and worth examining.


Do Some Advocacy Groups Benefit From the Debate?

Another uncomfortable question: does the stereotyping narrative itself serve a purpose?

The ongoing controversy:

  • Generates media attention
  • Creates fundraising opportunities
  • Justifies organizational relevance
  • Maintains cultural visibility

In other words, the issue can become self-sustaining. If the stereotype disappears, so does the activism built around it.

That doesn’t mean concerns were never valid — especially in the early 20th century when Italians faced discrimination. But in 2026, the context is very different.

Italian Americans today are:

  • Politicians
  • Judges
  • CEOs
  • Professors
  • Media figures
  • Cultural leaders

We are not defined by mob movies.


Why The Godfather Still Matters

The anniversary of The Godfather reminds us that the film is not just about crime — it’s about:

  • Immigration
  • Assimilation
  • Family loyalty
  • American ambition
  • Moral compromise
  • Power and identity

These are universal themes. The Mafia is simply the dramatic framework.

That’s why the film endures — not because it stereotypes Italians, but because it tells a powerful human story.


The Bottom Line

In 2026, the Mafia genre no longer marginalizes Italian Americans. If anything, it has become:

  • A shared cultural reference
  • A storytelling tradition
  • A historical lens
  • A dramatic framework
  • A form of self-aware humor

We can acknowledge the history without being defined by it.
We can tell these stories without glorifying them.
And we can laugh at the jokes — because we know they don’t define us.

Fifty-plus years after The Godfather, the real story isn’t about stereotyping.

It’s about cultural confidence.

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