Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, right, greets Hispanic journalists Wednesday in San Jose. Schwarzenegger has a Spanish-language Web site but has drawn fire for saying immigrants who want to learn English should tune out Spanish language media.
Danny Rodriguez, Associated Press
SACRAMENTO, Calif. Spanish-speaking immigrants can view Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's state Web site in Spanish, where he declares himself a man of the people: "Arnold Schwarzenegger: El Gobernador Del Pueblo."
They can listen every Saturday to the governor's weekly radio address, translated, on Spanish-language stations around the state. And they could have watched the governor last year on various Spanish-language news programs or in Spanish-language campaign commercials.
After Schwarzenegger said Wednesday that immigrants who want to learn English should tune out Spanish-language media, critics were questioning why the governor has devoted himself to bilingual communication if he thinks it poses a hindrance to the Latino community.
"He's inconsistent," said state Sen. Gil Cedillo, D-Los Angeles. "If immigrants did what he said, nobody would have watched his campaign ads. Nobody would have watched him on (Univision public affairs show) 'Voz y Voto."'
Schwarzenegger, responding to a question on how to improve the performance of English-learning immigrant students on the state's high school exit exam, said one good way would be to "turn off the Spanish television set. It's that simple. You've got to learn English."
The governor suggested that immigrants should likewise avoid Spanish-language newspapers, books and radio during his visit with the National Association of Hispanic Journalists in San Jose. He based his comments on his own experience as an Austrian immigrant.
Those remarks seemed to contradict the message sent by the governor's campaign last year. Schwarzenegger advisers often touted how they used Spanish-language outreach in ways unprecedented for a Republican.
The governor aired campaign commercials in Spanish. He met with Spanish-language daily La Opinion, where he made a point of renouncing his past support of the anti-illegal immigrant Proposition 187. He hired Arnoldo Torres, a political consultant who once co-hosted "Voz y Voto," to run Latino outreach.
Schwarzenegger's campaigns also benefited financially from the growth of Spanish-language media. Former Univision Chairman A. Jerrold Perenchio has given nearly $4 million to Schwarzenegger's political causes since 2003. Perenchio gave an additional $4.3 million to the California Republican Party last year, when the party financed advertisements to help Schwarzenegger win re-election.
The governor in 2006 received between 33 percent to 40 percent of the Latino vote based on three exit polls, a historically high figure for a Republican.
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