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GOP Understanding It Is A Brown World After All

February 22, 2010

The anti-immigrant rhetoric that many people like to throw around is not sound politics.  Some of the most vile language has been used for those who come to toil in the fields, and businesses around the nation.  The racism and hate that have been exhibited by some is very disturbing.  While the GOP were bashing immigrants in the past decade, the Democrats were reaping the rewards.  That became fact with the results of the 2006 mid-term elections, and further demonstrated with the election of Democratic candidates nationwide in 2008.  To counter the unreasonable and unworkable stance promoted by the anti-immigrant crowd there is now a growing movement within the Republican Party to woo the Hispanic and Latino communities.  I just wonder if the Tea Party types will recognize this too?

Some high-profile Republicans are adopting a softer vocabulary on immigration and trying to recruit more Hispanic candidates, a response to the party’s soul-searching about tactics that many strategists believe have alienated the country’s fastest-growing voter bloc.

In Texas, George P. Bush, the half Mexican-American son of former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, has founded Hispanic Republicans of Texas, a political action committee to promote Hispanics running for state and local offices.

In California, GOP gubernatorial front-runner Meg Whitman, the former eBay Inc. chief executive officer, tells Hispanics she would have voted against a Republican-backed 1994 measure barring illegal immigrants from receiving social services.

And Rep. Tom Price (R., Ga.), chairman of the conservative Republican Study Committee and an opponent of past efforts to create a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants, has been meeting with Hispanic leaders to find a new tone on that and other points of contention between Hispanic groups and conservatives.

For Republicans, such efforts carry risks, especially as conservative activists try to push GOP candidates to be more ideologically pure. Opposition to “amnesty,” a buzzword used by critics of proposals to legalize the 12 million illegal immigrants believed to be living in the U.S., remains a reliable applause line.

Nonetheless, many in the party have concluded that opposition to immigration legislation, a debate that is sometimes racially charged, has alienated millions of otherwise conservative Hispanic voters.

One Comment leave one →
  1. solly permalink
    February 22, 2010 5:23 PM

    Meg Whitman would have voted against the immigration prop. Big Deal! That’s if she had bothered to vote at all.
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/27/meg-whitman-voting-record_n_301038.html
    I would have voted for Abraham Lincoln

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