March
19, 2001
President Fox and
Governor Davis will hold historic Town Hall
Meeting
LOS ANGELES, (BUSINESS WIRE)
-- Univision flagship station KMEX-TV, Channel 34
along with the Organization of Los Angeles
Workers (OLAW) and the Service Employees
International Union (SEIU) will host and
broadcast the first statewide televised town hall
meeting between Mexican President Vicente Fox
Quesada and California Governor Gray Davis.
This event, scheduled for
Thursday, March 22, 2001, will connect
Californians in five major cities, as well as
viewers from across the state with the two
dignitaries. KMEX-TV will broadcast this historic
encounter from U.C.L.A. with no commercial
interruptions from 5 to 6 p.m.
The event will also be
carried simultaneously by other Univision
owned-and-operated stations in Bakersfield,
Fresno, Sacramento and San Francisco, as well as
by over half a dozen Univision affiliates in
California. The Univision Network will
rebroadcast this special event throughout the
United States at midnight later that evening.
The event, titled "Cara
a Cara Con Vicente Fox: Dos Lideres, Una Nueva
Era" (Face to Face with Vicente Fox: Two
Leaders, A New Era) will be hosted by KMEX-TV
anchors Eduardo Quezada and Teresa Quevedo.
The encounter will allow Fox
and Davis to respond to a wide range of relevant
issues from Los Angeles, Sacramento, San
Francisco, San Diego and Fresno. Spanish-speaking
viewers will witness first-hand how these dynamic
leaders plan to cooperate to address key issues
affecting their regions including commerce,
agriculture, immigration, education and the
improvement of Mexico-California relations.
"In May of 1999,
KMEX-TV/Univision hosted a milestone
Spanish-language town hall televised throughout
California between former Mexican President
Ernesto Zedillo and Governor Davis, a first in
the U.S. market regardless of language,"
stated Augustine Martinez, general manager of
KMEX-TV, Channel 34.
"Today, KMEX-TV, OLAW
and SEIU are excited to announce that this
dialogue between the President of Mexico and the
Governor will be facilitated by our respective
organizations to enable our audience and the two
leaders to focus on the issues which will shape
our futures in the coming years, both in Mexico
and California."
As part of KMEX-TV's public
affairs initiative, "Cara a Cara Con Vicente
Fox: Dos Lideres, Una Nueva Era" exemplifies
the significant commitment the station has made,
and continues to make, to provide California's
Latino community with the most comprehensive
coverage of important and relevant political
issues during the coming year.
The town hall meeting
between President Fox and Governor Davis builds
upon a tradition of historic political forums,
events and coverage by KMEX-TV and Univision at
the local, state and national levels.
Among other station and
network milestones are "Destino 2000:
Encuentro con George W. Bush" in February
2000, when then presidential hopeful George W.
Bush responded to Latino concerns throughout
California by means of direct dialogue via
satellite.
The station has also hosted
half-hour, one-on-one interviews with the
four-frontrunning presidential candidates of the
2000 election on the statewide political affairs
program, "Voz y Voto," between July and
November of 1999. Among those who appeared on the
show were Governor George W. Bush, Senator John
McCain, Senator Bill Bradley and Vice President
Al Gore.
Other landmark station
events include "Voces del Futuro: Cara a
Cara con el Presidente Clinton" (Voices of
the Future: Face to Face with President Clinton),
a historic intercontinental, interactive town
hall meeting held in October 1997 between
President Bill Clinton and young Hispanic
leaders.
All programs provided a
unique opportunity to the vast Spanish-speaking
audience in the United States to hear directly
from important and influential leaders on issues
of greatest concern to Hispanics.
KMEX-TV, Channel 34 is the
flagship station of the Univision Television
Group, the country's leading Spanish-language
television station group. The company operates 12
full-power and seven low-power television
stations and two television translator stations.
KMEX-TV is accessible on the World Wide Web at www.kmex.com.
The Organization of Los
Angeles Workers (OLAW), a joint project of
SEIU/HERE, was created to help immigrants stand
up for their rights and gain new opportunities,
and to promote civic participation in their
communities.
During its first year, OLAW
reached out to churches, community organizations,
the media and individuals on a number of
important issues including: immigration
legalization, citizenship, living wages, rights
in the workplace, access to affordable health
care, fair housing, and public education. OLAW
also is working to build political strength by
encouraging immigrants to get involved in the
political process, registering to vote and
casting their ballots on Election Day.
With 1.4 million members, the Service
Employees International Union (SEIU) is the
largest union in the AFL-CIO, and about 25% of
its membership are immigrants, making SEIU the
largest U.S. union representing immigrant workers
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