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It Would Behoove the Republican Party to Immediately Stop Pissing Off Latinos
In an op-ed published in Time last month, Republican political consultant Mike Murphy wrote, "[it] was a huge shock to the GOP when Barack Obama won Republican Indiana last year. The bigger news was how he did it. Latino voters delivered the state. Exit polls showed that they provided Obama with a margin of more than 58,000 votes in a state he carried by a slim 26,000 votes. That's right, GOP, you've entered a brave new world ruled by Latino Hoosiers, and you're losing."
I was on the ground in Indiana during much of the 2008 election campaigns working as an Organizing Fellow on the Latino Steering Committee for then-Senator Barack Obama's Campaign for Change in East Chicago. When I began work there in July, many Latino voters were undecided, having supported Hillary Clinton during the long, dramatic Democratic Primary that had opened many wounds.
What persuaded many East Chicago Latinos whom I met to ultimately vote for Obama in '08 was that they felt vilified by the Republican Primary's chest-thumping over immigration reform -- led by then-Congressman Tom Tancredo. East Chicago's Latinos also shared the increasingly widespread disillusionment with the GOP over the Bush administration's two terms in the Oval Office, terms that left a disproportionately high number of Latinos from places like East Chicago dead on battlefields in the Middle East. These were but two of the many, many grievances East Chicago Latinos had that Republican candidates failed to effectively address during the campaign, if they addressed them at all.
So...why didn't Republican candidates immediately move to evaluate, engage and inspire Latino voters in the aftermath of then-Senator Clinton's withdrawal? This was a question I asked my fellow "Hopemongers" throughout the campaign. The most common response I got was that Republican campaigns were catering to ideologues' anti-immigration bravado. I found this response to be implausible in that it called into question the competence of the Republican Party's strategists, who horsewhipped their Democratic counterparts through most of the last three decades of American politics. Or to put it particularly, many foul political qualities are now synonymous with Karl Rove's name; incompetence is not one of them.
A more plausible variant of the "anti-immigration bravado" responses that were occasionally offered was that anti-immigrant ideologues were indispensable in the existing Republican campaign finance structures; but there is little evidence to support this claim.
Whatever the reason the GOP chose to ignore (and in many cases, offend) the Latino vote, without it, the party's future would appear to be a series of increasingly humiliating election losses. According to research done by the Pew Hispanic Center, "Hispanics now make up 22% of all children under the age of 18 in the United States -- up from 9% in 1980." And the majority of these children [read: future voters] are the U.S. born offspring of immigrants. One can thus surmise that the current and future states of the American electorate is one in which immigration will not be a vague historical statement of "uniqueness", but a flesh and blood reality of a vast, rapidly growing demographic of potential voters. To continue to vilify the "illegal aliens" as "criminals" is just the sort of messaging that could create at least one generation of Latino voters with a deep-seated tendency to vote for the Democratic Party's candidates similar to the unanimity Ronald Reagan inspired among Evangelical Christians for the Republican Party. The difference here is that Evangelicals were a noisy fringe of the overall demographic, whereas Latinos are poised to someday replace Caucasians as the majority demographic in the United States.
Murphy suggests that "[a] smart GOP would be deeply in the microloan and free-English-lessons business in immigrant communities," and that it would also avoid seeking the "cheap applause" of the anti-immigration right. To Murphy, "cheap" is a quantified word. He "made a career out of counting votes" and thus recognizes that a serious strategic approach to the GOP's future must accept that the electoral value of noisy anti-immigration posturing is plummeting at a rate roughly commensurate with its ability to win national elections.
Republican Party strategists should take to heart the extreme sensitivity in the media during this week's Supreme Court confirmation hearings for Sonia Sotomayor to any remark that can be spun into an overall ethnic-, "race-" and gender-related diatribe by Republican lawmakers (and therefore, the Republican Party) against all Latinas (and therefore, all Latinos). This should come as no surprise to today's GOP strategists, as it was their predecessors who perfected the tactics that are now used against them.
But Obama's in the White House now, and earlier this year the New York Times reported that "comprehensive immigration legislation, including a plan to make legal status possible for an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants, would be a priority in [President Obama's] first year in office." While I have my doubts about just how much of a first year priority comprehensive immigration reform will prove to be, it will be a priority during President Obama's first term; and when comprehensive immigration reform happens, the party that calls it amnesty will fare far worse on election day than the one that supports it as necessary, justice, emancipation, etc. However it's fed to the media, behind closed doors, what Mike Murphy's vote-counting counterparts in the Democratic Party see in comprehensive immigration reform is 12 million potential votes.
Unless the Republicans prefer losing successive elections by increasingly wide margins, they should encourage Republican lawmakers to stand with President Obama on comprehensive immigration reform. I know. I know. But they broke the law! They steal 'merican jobs! They don't even speak English! etc. The fact remains that a most of them are already us, as in We the People, as in citizens with votes to cast. And many more of them will be of voting age or naturalized into the electoral processes very soon. Republicans can't prevent this, and Democrat lawmakers are happy to let a Republican colleague look like a "racist" hillbilly asshole for interrupting a Supreme Court nominee during her confirmation hearing.
Therefore, Republicans should go out of their way to make comprehensive immigration reform as painless as possible. Obama has mentioned having illegal immigrants pay a fine, as criminals. Republicans on Capitol Hill could oppose this aspect of the reform bill as a show of good faith to the demographic at the heart of their landslide losses last fall. Furthermore, Republican Party messaging has always revolved around the rhetoric of the "bootstraps" party of self-determination, manifest destiny, and the importance of family. Well, these are the very principles that brought successive generations of Latino immigrants to the United States.
Finally, when their man from Oklahoma, Senator Tom Coburn, interrupts a Supreme Court nominee by attempting to get on television with an innocuous "You'll have lots of 'splainin' to do," call him on it. Blog, tweet, phone, email, etc. to let him know that interrupting a Supreme Court nominee with a wisecrack--any wisecrack--is not what he's paid to do during a Supreme Court nomination hearing, especially a wisecrack Time can easily interpret as "invoking a phrase familiar to fans of the 1950s sitcom I Love Lucy, on which Lucy's long-suffering husband Ricky Ricardo (Cuban-American Desi Arnaz in real life) would often utter the refrain in exasperation at his zany wife's antics." But before any of this can happen, Republicans must first recognize that the rise of the Latino voter is as inevitable as a naturalization process for the suspected twelve million undocumented immigrants in the United States. Failing to do so is to insist upon the Republican Party's indefinite political irrelevance.
- Pablo-Manriquez's blog
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Comments
Good Diary
I, too, suggested that Republicans support Obama's immigration reform. I likened Republican support to Clinton's support of welfare reform. A way to take the issue off the table and allow Republicans to compete for Latino votes. However, the anti-immigration faction is too large, too vocal and will punish reformers and modernizers. They almost killed McCain's bid for the nomination, and unless a 'conservative' nominee is crushed like Mondale and Dukakis, then I don't see any chance for any modernization of the Republican party.
Moreover, I know the polls say 40% of this country is conservative, but, policy-wise, I'd say it's around 20%. Shoot, I think of myself as personally "conservative:" pro-life (but a women's choice, neverthelss), never been on welfare, etc but I'd never want a country where liberty is narrowly defined as right-wing so often want it to be.
-Liberal ToddLuvsLounging
The Reason
Why it actually may only be 20% policy-wise conservative speaks only to their and your ignorance of the issues at hand. Similar to socially conservative leaning african americans who blindly vote along party lines on a 90% plus clip. Comparing Repubs support for amnesty to Clinton support for Welfare reform is to somehow say that adding 15-20 million illegals to our infrastructure roles would be helpful to our economy. I disagree.
Perception
The GOP can blame it on ignorance, but then the GOP would be mistaken and never have to change. Or the GOP can give the public some credit for intelligence in making rational choices and the GOP can reassess their positions. I have to ask you, why do Asian-Americans vote Democratic 60% of the time when they are have some of the highest education levels?
As for amnesty, I don't think the GOP oppose it for economic reason. Illegal workers are working after all. I believe grassroot conservatives are more afraid that they'll be instantly be behind by 20 million votes. However, if I remember correctly, illegal immigrants would have to go to the end of the line and the whole process would take 5 to 10 years in order to become an American citizen. If the GOP is seen as part of the solution, they could compete for their votes. Even Palin recognizes the GOP needs to do better with Latinos. It seems the GOP leadership is ready, but the base is not. The GOP leadership can read the demographic tea leaves, they know elections will only get harder for the GOP if Latino-Americans perceive the GOP is hostile to them, so why not help Obama get a a good immigration reform bill that legalizes immigrants, creates a strong guest program and secures our border and get some credit. Or you can allow the Democrats ram something down your throats and receive no credit. Or you can block it and allow the anti-Latino perception to linger and let Democrats win the West for the foreseeable future.
Republicans should just be like the Democrats in every way
That's the solution, isn't it? I mean, if there's no difference between candidates ideologically, then voters can choose based on other things such as who's got the better singing voice or something.
As part of their outreach, the GOP can just turn over imm. policy to MALDEF, the ACLU, and the Mexican government. They'll be sure to come up with the best policies for the U.S. Also, the GOP should listen to people like Mike Murphy since he clearly knows what he's talking about.
Eh,
Appealing to conservative Latino values doesn't seem to trump Republican hostility to Latino immigrants. Unless Republicans can figure out a way to reach Latino voters, Florida, New Mexico, Nevada, Arizona and Colorado will be permanently lost, just like California. I don't see how Republicans intend to compete in Presidential elections.
Repuplican Hostility?
Wow have you ever talked to a conservative?
Should Have Phrased That Better
should have written 'perceived' hostility toward Latino immigrants.
Appealling to Hispanics means no more conservatives.
In order to appeal to Hispanics, the Repubilcan Party would have to give up any pretense of being the conservative party and be the me-too Democratic-lite big government, big spending, nanny state, social engineering party. Abandoning any pretense of being conservative to appeal to the second most liberal demographic is the U. S is insanity. It will lose more white voters than it will gain in Hispanic voters.
Supporting open borders and unlimited immigration means supporting the resulting higher taxes, bigger government, higher crime, more sprawl, worse schools, and higher costs.
The support of open borders, unlimited immigration while maintainng government supported race based social engineering, is just one more way that the Republicans can use to spit in the faces of the middle class.
If yuou are worried about the demographics, then the only solution is to support the deportation of all illegal aliens, and changing the law to forbid anchor babies being used to increase immigration.
The Republicans Party should be the party for Ajmericans and the the Democratic Party should be the party that is willing to sell citizenship for a few dollars.
Destroy the Current GOP in Order to Save It
The Republican party should give up the pretense of being conservative since this country is not going to give up Social Security, Medi-care, Medi-caid, and public education and soon to be Universal Health Care. They could be the standard and efficiency party. See Tory party.
The GOP is already losing young, white voters. The GOP should spend more time expanding their pool of voters instead of fighting to keep a shrinking demographic.
Immigration reform does NOT support open borders, does NOT support unlimited immigration, does NOT result in higher crime. The other remarks are debateable, but yelping false anti-immigration views only alienates the majority of Americans.
I believe the middle-class and business have enjoyed their low inflation economy for quite awhile.
Deportation will wreck a large segment of our economy. Anti-immigration will need to change the Constitution and that's unrealistic.
The GOP's base shrill, Chicken Little response to issues is more of a problem for the GOP then anybody else in this country. It took the Carter, Mondale and Dukakis beating before Dems changed.
The U.S. does not need two big government party.
Thank you for confirming that the reason to pander to racist Hispanics and to support race based government is to keep the Republican Party as a brand. However, why does the U.S. need two brands that offer the same big government, heavy regulation, nanny state government.,
How about all of the open borders and unlimited immigraiton types go over to the Democratic Party. They love the idea of millions of poor Hispanics voting for an ever expanding list of entitlements and government goodies.
Then the adults can take back the Republican Party from the big government, big spending idiots who call themselves compassionate conservatives. Then the adults can work to eliminate race based programs, to only have regulations that are based on science and a cost-benefit analysis, and that spending will be cut instead of ever expanding.
What all of the open border and unlimited immigraiton Republicans need to realize is that the Hispanics are never going to vote for a bunch of rich white boys and that what ever you think you are saving with cheap labor will be lost with higher taxes, higher housing costs, private school tuition, higher insurance premiums, higher crime losses, and more government regulations.
The Republicans should be the fiscal conservative party and there is nothing fiscally conservative about open borders and unlimited immigraiton. And since there will be no deportation, that means everyone who crosses the borders gets to stay and gets all the entitlements that they want.
Trying fighting for more freedom isntread of selling citrizenship for a few dollars.
Big Government Party
We have had two big government parties since the 1930's. We are not going back. Spending grew even during the Reagan administration. Which modern country does not have big government? Third World countries. GOP support of Third World policies does not seem to be a political winner.
Immigration reform and secure borders are not mutually exclusive. You can have both and will be a political necessity for Obama. Taking credit for security seems right up the GOP alley.
Fiscally conservative does not mean only cutting taxes. It could also mean balancing the budget by 'raising' taxes on the wealthy. I'm surprised how strong support is for raising taxes on the wealthy. Perhaps this country wised up on how much wealth went exclusively to the wealthy in the past 20 years.
If you have any links proving illegal immigrants are an economic negative, I'd like to read them.
-Liberal ToddLuvsLounging
Open borders is Third World politics
California is running a massive budget defidcit and having double digit unemployment due to illegal immigration. The total number of whites in California has been going down for two decades due to the decline in middle class living conditions. Open borders and unlimited immigraiton means givng the rest of the U. S. the economic conditions that California has today. California has very high taxes and still has lousy government services and massive budget deficits due to the costs of supporting millions of poor Hispanics.
California also shows that you cannot tax your way to fiscal responsbility. The politicians have forgotten the ratchet effect because pandering to minorities was easier than making hard choices.
Immigraiton reform means open borders. President Reagan promised border enforced and he lied. After five years of stellar border security and interior enforcement, then the cheap labor Republicans and the pro-third world Democrats will have the crediblity to discuss immigration reform. Until they demonstate outstanding border security, they have zero credbility to discuss anything else about immigraiton. Immigration reform before border security just demonostgate the desire for milions of future automatic Democratic voters and the desire for cheap labor.
The easiest way to cut spending is to eliminate illegal aliens and the demand the create for government services.
When one looks at Southern California along with Detoirt, Baltimore, St Louis, Cleveland, the future that the Democratic Party wants to create is lousy and has dismal prospects. Instead of spending billions on illegal aliens who pay little in taxes, why not put the money in real educaiton instead of race based social engineering. Instead of spending billions cleaning up the messes caused by illegal aliens, why not use the money to improve the future instead of turing the U.S. into Juraez-Norte.
If you want the U.S. to be the next Brazil, then follow the program of open borders and unlimited immigraiton. There will be a few rich, private school, walled community residing whites and the rest of the country will seem like the third world.
Its Been A While
Its been a while since ive read a piece so chalk full of strawmen and incoherent unsupported statements. Most of your "support" for your point-of-view are actually perfect arguments against it.
"To continue to vilify the "illegal aliens" as "criminals". . .
The mere fact that you dont consider these "illegal aliens" as criminals makes your argument moot. Its like the guy who wants all drugs legalized, any rational person realizes that their arguments are not based on facts, common sense, or public opinion.
"Republican Party strategists should take to heart the extreme sensitivity in the media during this week's Supreme Court confirmation hearings for Sonia Sotomayor to any remark that can be spun into an overall ethnic"
Even though you are blaming this fact on Republican's historical actions, it is a stark reminder that we have become a society blinded by fear and political correctness. I feel you have bought into the media spin and allowed yourself to believe exactly what they tell you. The FACT that any conservative will be immediately branded a racist, xenophobe, homophobe, etc for disagreeing with a liberal mindset is alarming in and of itself.
I choose to think the best approach to "win over" dissaffected latino voters is through grass roots education. People like me who articulate our ideas with a less pompous tone than someone like say, Rush Limbaugh. The fact remains that we are a center right leaning country, a horrible candidate such as John McCain getting 47% of the vote in the horrid political climate in which liberals own the high schools, universities, unions, congress etc is evidence of this.