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Michael Barone
Michael Barone
13 May 2013
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Republicans Must Show Support for Hispanic Dreams

Comment

Rarely does a political party issue a document so scathingly critical of itself and its most recent presidential nominee as the report of the five-member Growth and Opportunity Project of the Republican National Committee.

It refers to Mitt Romney on occasion as "our presidential nominee" and notes disapprovingly of his reference, in the debate about immigration, to "self-deportation."

And while the report states modestly, "We are not a policy committee," it does call for a policy — "comprehensive immigration reform" — that many, perhaps most, Republican members of Congress oppose.

I think there's some risk here for the Republican National Committee. But there also may be some reward for Republicans generally.

The risk is of turning off officeholders and voters Republicans need to win elections and prevail on issues. The reward is Republicans might be able to win some elections they'd otherwise lose.

"If Hispanic Americans perceive that a GOP nominee or candidate does not want them in the United States (i.e., self-deportation), they will not pay attention to our next sentence," the report says.

"It does not matter what we say about education, jobs or the economy; if Hispanics think we do not want them here, they will close their ears to our advice."

To this they contrast George W. Bush's 2000 and 2004 campaign refrain: "Family values don't stop at the Rio Grande, and a hungry mother is going to feed her child."

Let me put it another way. To win someone's vote, you need to be friendly to them and those they identify with.

My observation in travel over the years is that Hispanics are treated very differently by Anglos in Texas than in California.

In Texas, white Anglos see people with Hispanic features as fellow Texans. They smile and say howdy.

They know, because they have to take Texas history in high school, that Hispanics have been living in Texas for more than 200 years and that some fought for Texas independence against Mexico.

In California, white Anglos, liberal or conservative, treat people with Hispanic features as landscape workers or parking valet attendants. They look past them without speaking or hand them their car keys.

George W. Bush's words about family values were very Texan, down to the reference to the Rio Grande.

That enabled him to win about 40 percent of Hispanic votes in 2004 (examination of county returns suggests that the exit poll number of 44 percent is a little high).

As for Romney, when he said "self-deportation," he was actually describing something real.

The folks at the Pew Hispanic Center have concluded, I think with some reluctance, that net migration from Mexico to the United States fell to around zero in the recession year 2007. There may have been more reverse migration than inward migration since then.

But "self-deportation" and "reverse migration" are cold, abstract terms. Politicians (and pundits) need to look beneath unfeeling statistics for the effect on the lives of actual human beings.

And when you look at the RealtyTrac numbers of foreclosures in the peak years of 2007 and 2010, you find that a majority were in four states — California, Nevada, Arizona and Florida.

When you look at the counties with high foreclosure rates, you're looking at the Central Valley, the Inland Empire east of Los Angeles, metro Las Vegas and metro Phoenix.

You're looking at tens of thousands of Hispanic homebuyers who were granted mortgages with little or no money down and that proved to be far beyond their capacity to service when housing crashed and the construction industry shut down.

Many such mortgages were issued because of government policy favoring minority homeownership and because Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pushed this policy hard.

This was bad public policy that shattered people's dreams. Homebuyers had assumed they would amass wealth through supposedly inevitable housing price gains.

Instead, many — and others who witnessed this tragedy — gave up on the United States and moved back to Mexico.

Republicans can perhaps gain entree with Hispanic voters by supporting comprehensive immigration reform. At the very least, they need to avoid approaching this issue with the angry hostility you hear from too many callers on talk radio.

But they also need to show an understanding of the realities these people are facing. They need to show the how their policies can help them achieve their dreams.

The Republican National Committee report is not a bad start.

Michael Barone, senior political analyst for The Washington Examiner (www.washingtonexaminer.com), is a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a Fox News Channel contributor and a co-author of The Almanac of American Politics. To find out more about Michael Barone, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

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Comments

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Sir;... No one leaves their home land without at least a very good reason... People who can possibly make it where they are often hang on until it is too late to leave... It is evidence of the tyranny of conservatism in the minds of mankind that so few can leave even their past behind, and become a new person among a new people... Two things have drawn people to this land... One is necessity and the other is opportunity... The opportunity is more promise than fact, and the necessity is too real to deny... So, it is inevitable that when any one suggests that some one should return to the place where necessity drove them out, that they will be dismissed as insane...
No one ever changes without a very good reason... It was an accident of my youth to have once opened a psychology text book from a collage class and read one single observation: All change is an attempt at problem solving...
Some individual psychologies are more given to change; but as Pavlov found with his dogs: Those least resistent to change are the easiest changed back to their former behavior... Some dogs are dogged...The republican party is dogged... If they can keep a hammer lock on government by means of a majority contrived by gerrymandering there will be no reason for such people to seek change... In charge of the government as they have essentially been in recent years, they found they had to govern, and without any over arching vision they were doomed to follow principals of self interest blindly to their demise...
I think that your party is incapable of change... I think your party is incapable of growth psychologically and physically... They are regional, sectional, and ideological, but to try to accomodate others is to lose the aging and praying and racially constricted base... I think they will stick with their base because it is easier to sabotage government than make it work, and if you look at our constitution, and those who drew it up; the fear of government was as strong among those people as their desire to plunder it for their own purposes...
Their great achievement was to leave government powerless to govern property... It was possible to regulate commerce, and to tax; but these abilities have been fairly well discarded; and so government is powerless in regard to wealth...At the same time, no one in government right or left is free of the corrosive power of wealth on their morals... If they want their jobs, they must bow before the idol of money...It is inevitable that the democrats will be made more like the republicans, less responsive to the needs of the people, blind to the growing suffering around us, and careless of the debt that is laid upon the people simply because of the effect of money in politics...The republicans do not need to become right oriented democrats... First, they would lose their base... Second; no one would believe them, or choose imitation democrats over democrats...
If the republicans want to change; and God knows they should; they ought to do as they are doing in making government non-functional... And in addition they should offer the right a truly revolutionary proposal: That only white men should have a vote if they have property enough to pay a tax... It is crazy for the republicans to trot out black and women candidates for office who simply sound like white men, only white-er...It is better for the republicans to advance of theory of government they cannot justifiably sabotage... They like to think they belong in the presidency and if the office is denied to them they are correct to resist all government...
I only wish the democrats were so commited to the failure of republican administrations...But they are not... The democrats sell the people on the idea that government can work... The republicans only have the object of proving the democrats liars which they no doubt are out of their abundance of hope...The republicans should say what they will support, and support it if the have the chance... They should not compromise... Ultimately, they should sabotage government to death before they lose the power to do so...
The limited government we have with all its checks and balances is still too powerful for the rich...Their concept of freedom leaves only them free... As important as people and votes are to the republican party; money is still more important... Any change that loses the party its base will inevitably lose them their money... Any thing that limits the ability of the republican party to throw a monkey wrench into the works of government is an insult to the rich...
If you say that the rich need government more than your average person; you are correct...But that does not mean they actually want to pay taxes for all that government does for them alone...Just as they say taxes are for little people, so they say as much of law... The debt run up to defend our commonwealth were it has been exported, all around the world is the greatest share of the national debt; but you cannot expect the rich to pay taxes on property beyond our borders...You cannot expect the government with our current conception of private property to forbid the export of our capital, so it leaves, and those without jobs or income are suffered with the debt...
If I were your republican party, I would suggest a perpetual period of tutelage for hispanics that would leave them as second class citizens, or not citizens at all, but legally able to work for low wages with terrible working conditions... Simply apply some grand old label to this new slavery and sell, sell, sell it...
Thanks...Sweeney
Comment: #1
Posted by: James A, Sweeney
Thu Mar 21, 2013 4:44 AM
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