A remarkable thing happened since Anthony Petruccelli first got elected to represent his hometown of East Boston in the Massachusetts House 17 years ago: The district turned minority-majority, with Latinos now accounting for 57 percent of the residents.
And Petruccelli’s current Senate district – serving Eastie, other parts of Boston, Revere, Winthrop, and East Cambridge – is 23 percent Hispanic, one of the most Latino-heavy senate districts statewide.
That’s why Petruccelli’s resignation announcement last week raises, yet again, the question of whether someone will harness dormant voting power and bring more Hispanics into state politics.
Due in part to low rates of voter participation, the Latino presence on Beacon Hill is weak: Only six of 160 state representatives and one of 40 senators are Hispanic. That adds up to 3.5 percent representation in the General Court, while Hispanics account for 11.6 percent of the state population.
But Latinos have notched some recent municipal victories. Last month, Waltham and Haverhill elected their first Latino city councilors ever, while the Chelsea City Council went from zero to six Latino members. Most of these seats were won by young candidates representing a new Hispanic generation, one with a greater appreciation of making a difference for immigrant communities through public service.

“I want to give a voice to Latinos,” who make up a quarter
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In this article:Hispanic and elections, Hispanics, Latino Health, Latino voters, Massachusetts, Massachusetts voters
