Republican Hispanic Candidates Sell
Out Hispanics for Political Gain
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Republican candidates Marco Rubio,
Susana Martinez and Brian Sandoval
A new crop of Hispanic Republican
candidates is capturing Hispanic votes in spite of tough immigration stances
that support Apartheid in Arizona. |
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If Hispanic Republican candidates
can sell out their heritage for political gain, they will sell out their
constituents for political gain at a drop of a dime. These Hispanic Republican
candidates would even sell out their abuelita for political gain. They have no
scruples. — Jon Garrido,
Jon@JonGarrido.com
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WASHINGTON
(By Arian Campo-Flores, Newsweek)
October 15, 2010
— If you were crafting a
political platform to appeal to
Hispanic voters, Marco Rubio’s
wouldn’t be it. Though he’s
Cuban-American, the Florida GOP
Senate candidate supports the
Arizona immigration law that has
infuriated Hispanic groups
nationwide. He supports making
English the country’s official
language. He opposes a path to
citizenship for illegal immigrants.
He opposes a measure that would
legalize undocumented youth if they
attend college or enlist in the
military. He even opposes counting
illegal immigrants as part of the
U.S. Census, which is used to help
determine funding for states. All of
which puts Rubio in line with the
most right-wing elements of his
party. “I don’t know of anyone
that’s harsher than Rubio” on these
issues, says Jorge Mursuli,
president of Miami-based Democracia,
a Hispanic advocacy group. “It’s
really unconscionable.”
Yet Rubio appears to be doing just
fine among Florida’s Hispanic
voters. Though recent polls have
been erratic in measuring that
support due to small sample sizes,
it’s “safe to say that he’s going to
win the Hispanic vote by a healthy
margin,” says Dario Moreno, a
professor at Florida International
University. Two other Hispanic GOP
candidates running in statewide
races — Susana Martinez in the New
Mexico governor’s race and Brian
Sandoval in the Nevada governor’s
race — have also taken hardline
stances on immigration. And they,
too, seem to be capturing
significant Hispanic backing.
If these candidates win, which polls
suggest they’re poised to do,
they’ll surely set off triumphant
cheers in Republican circles. The
GOP will point to them as evidence
that the party offers a welcoming
home for Hispanics. And many of its
strategists will likely assume that
the path to Hispanic votes lies in
running Hispanic candidates, even if
those candidates’ stances diverge
sharply from prevailing Hispanic
sentiment on key issues. But it’s
not quite that simple. This crop of
contenders is succeeding for unique
reasons: the characteristics of
their particular states, for
instance, and the way they’ve framed
the discussion. To conclude that
they offer a winning formula for
Republicans to woo back Hispanics —
who have defected from the party in
droves, partly because of some of
its members’ harsh rhetoric about
immigrants — would be, at best,
premature.
Campaign Controversies Between one
candidate for Congress being
photographed wearing a Nazi uniform
and New York gubernatorial hopeful
Carl Paladino's anti-gay gaffes, the
hosts of late night have ample
material heading into the midterm
elections.
Cuban-Americans, the most powerful
Hispanic constituency in Florida,
have been voting reliably Republican
since the 1960s. Even though they’re
now outnumbered by more-moderate
non-Cubans, they still turn out
disproportionately on Election Day.
Moreover, they, along with Puerto
Ricans, the second-largest Hispanic
group in the state, don’t face the
same immigration woes as, say,
Mexicans in California. Cubans can
qualify for residency a year after
arriving in the United States, and
Puerto Ricans are born American
citizens. “We don’t have even a
fraction of the challenges on the
immigration front as folks in the
border states,” says Tony Calatayud,
the Cuban-American chairman of
Conservadores, a new Miami-based
organization that supports
conservative candidates, including
Rubio. “That’s why Marco stands his
ground [on immigration matters] and
is really not affected by the
backlash of Hispanic groups.”
Hispanics in New Mexico also have a
distinct profile. Only 16 percent of
them are foreign born, and many of
the remainder come from families who
have lived in the state for
centuries. For them, “immigration,
in terms of their personal
relationship to it, is pretty far
removed,” says Gabriel Sanchez, a
professor at the University of New
Mexico. That helps explain why
gubernatorial candidate Martinez has
suffered little fallout for her
get-tough-on-the-border ads and her
opposition to granting driver’s
licenses to undocumented people.
Polls have shown her capturing about
30 percent of the state’s Hispanic
vote, says Sanchez, which is “very
strong for a Republican candidate
for governor.”
In Nevada, the situation is just the
opposite. Hispanics are fairly new
to the state, and 44 percent are
immigrants, including many who lack
documentation. “We have such a
transient population,” says Kenneth
Fernandez, a professor at the
University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
“There’s not a really strong tie to
the Democratic Party,” he says. And
the Hispanic population in the state
is “not as politically active.”
Sandoval has come out in favor of
the Arizona immigration law, and
when asked by a Univision reporter
how he’d feel if his kids were
stopped and asked to prove their
citizenship, he reportedly replied,
“My children don’t look Hispanic.”
He later claimed not to remember
making such a comment. Fernandez
thinks Sandoval will capture at
least a third of the Hispanic vote,
though he attributes that more to
the community’s political detachment
and the anti-Democratic mood in the
state than to the candidate’s
inherent appeal.
Rubio and Martinez in particular
have been savvy about framing their
positions. Unlike some Republicans,
who stridently denounce illegal
immigration, Rubio always emphasizes
that he’s “pro-legal immigration.”
He regularly extols his parents’
journey to the U.S. and their climb
up the economic ladder as an
immigrant success story. As a
result, says FIU professor Moreno,
“the cultural issues mitigate
[Hispanics’] disagreement with
Rubio.” In the case of Martinez, a
career prosecutor, she’s careful to
cast her opposition to undocumented
immigration as a law-and-order
matter, says Sanchez. And the fact
that she comes from southern New
Mexico grants her legitimacy in
discussing border issues.
Hispanics respond favorably to such
cultural connections. Not that
they’ll necessarily vote for a
candidate out of simple ethnic
solidarity, but they may grant him
or her more latitude. Rubio “is
given a pass on some of these
issues,” says Daniel Smith, a
professor at the University of
Florida. Some analysts suggest
there’s an element of wink-wink
going on when a Hispanic candidate
takes a hardline stance on
immigration. “A lot of Hispanic
voters, when they hear Hispanic
candidates talk like that, don’t
really believe it,” says Mario
Lopez, president of the Hispanic
Leadership Fund, who adds that this
is merely a theory and that he
hasn’t seen data to back it up.
“They assume the candidate is
talking like that because they need
to,” he says.
Rubio, Martinez, and Sandoval have
scrambled the script for Hispanic
Republican politicians, who
typically support offering a path to
citizenship for illegal immigrants.
That includes Florida’s three
Cuban-American members of Congress
and former senator Mel Martinez,
whose seat Rubio is vying to fill.
Yet it’s myopic to presume that
“there’s some uniform Hispanic view”
on things, says Alex Burgos, a Rubio
spokesman. “The No. 1 issue in the
Hispanic community is economic
empowerment, and [Rubio] is
essentially running on that.” This
midterm election will test just how
ideologically diverse the Hispanic
electorate is, says Moreno according
to a recent Pew Hispanic Center
poll, 65 percent plan of Hispanics
to vote Democratic in November,
while 22 percent plan to vote
Republican. If these emerging
conservatives win, and capture
sizable chunks of the Hispanic vote
doing so, how will the major
national Hispanic organizations,
which are dominated by Democrats,
react? As Moreno summarizes the
dilemma, “Do you denounce them as
traitors, or try to embrace a
broader Hispanic agenda?”
If that agenda involves policies
that Hispanics largely believe
dehumanize immigrants, it may be a
tough sell — which goes to the heart
of the Republican predicament. After
several election cycles in which the
party has alienated the nation’s
fastest-growing demographic, it
essentially has two choices, says
Sanchez: “either change your policy
stances, or try to find candidates
like” Rubio, Martinez, or Sandoval,
who may be able to pick up Hispanic
support. For now, the GOP has opted
for the latter, a move that has
generated no shortage of skepticism.
“It’s very difficult to put the onus
on a couple of these candidates
after all the years of demonizing
blacks and Hispanics,” says Smith.
“These actions speak louder than a
few token minorities at the top of
the ticket.” The candidates would
surely bristle at being
characterized that way. Perhaps they
can exact their revenge by proving
him wrong.