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Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GOP. Show all posts
The Census, GOP and Latinos: Bye Bye Latino Vote!
Posted by LATINO EVENTS Y TESPIS MAGAZINE
on
Friday, October 16, 2009
, under
census,
census 2010,
COMUNIDAD,
GOP,
huffpost,
latinos,
miguel guadalupe,
politics,
tespis magazine
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Miguel Guadalupe's article on the huffpost hits the mark, people. These tactics have the potential of creating a lot of fear. An educated voter is the way to go.
The Census and the GOP Latino Strategy: If You Can't Beat 'Em, Don't Count 'Em
The amendment to the fiscal 2010 Commerce-Justice-Science spending bill (HR 2847) being proposed in the senate right now to stop funding the 2010 Census until they change their survey to include questions about citizenship may be the final nail in the coffin of the GOP/Latino relationship.Fresh from their successful assault on ACORN, who incurred the wrath of the GOP not because members gave bad advice to pretend pimps, but because of their ability to register millions of poor people ahead of the 2008 elections, the radical right now turns on the revered and apolitical institution of the Census Bureau, in the hopes of intimidating future generations from the most basic of social participation -- being counted.
Specifically, Republican Sens. David Vitter of Louisiana and Bob Bennett of Utah have proposed to require all those who fill out the surveys to affirm their citizenship status, and then attempt to discount millions of people who peacefully live, work and contribute to America. The justification is that the undocumented should not be counted because they can't vote. However, there is no question of whether people are ex-cons, another population of people who do not have voting rights in many states, but are counted within the census numbers. The amendment gets even narrower as they consider making the choice "citizen" or "non-citizen" seeking to discount even further those who are "legal" residents or have visas but haven't yet become full citizens.
Read the whole article on the huffpost
GOP: There's A Rep For That! Video
I run into this video at the HuffPost and I had to share it! El diluvio les cayó encima.
The Progress Report on IMMIGRATION- LATINOS- REPUBLICANS
Posted by LATINO EVENTS Y TESPIS MAGAZINE
on
Friday, July 17, 2009
, under
COMUNIDAD,
Democrats,
GOP,
immigration,
latinos,
politics,
republicans,
the progress report
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Just wanted to share this post from The Progress Report on IMMIGRATION.
The Right's Internal Battle
This past week, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice stressed the need for conservatives to embrace a "welcoming" attitude towards immigrants. Puerto Rican Governor Luis Fortuño, considered to be "one of the most prominent Hispanic Republicans," called on the GOP to rethink its hard-line positions on immigration. These recent comments add to the laundry list of Republican leaders and strategists who have indicated that the party must clean up its views and rhetoric if it hopes to endure. That's because Latinos and immigrants make up a growing voting bloc that has largely abandoned the Republican Party and "flipped red states to blue." The reason for their defection: Right-wing anti-immigrant demagoguery tarnished the Republican brand during the 2007 immigration debate. The GOP is viewed as having created a climate of undeterred public immigrant-bashing that brought nativism into the mainstream. As a result, anti-Latino hate crimes increased, racial profiling soared, and in Nov. 2008, Latino and immigrant voters turned out in favor of Democrats in hopes of seeing major improvements in their communities. Census estimates indicate that Latinos will make up one quarter of the U.S. population by 2042. Much of the political success of the current Congress and administration hinges on its ability to deliver comprehensive immigration reform.
LESSONS LEARNED: Several members of the GOP leadership came out of last year's elections saying the GOP seriously needs to "change its tune" on immigration. Last weekend, Rice told a Sacramento, CA audience, "We've got to keep welcoming these people [immigrants]." A few months ago, she indicated that not passing comprehensive immigration reform that would have legalized millions of undocumented immigrants in 2007 was her "deepest regret." Rice's comments are backed by her former colleagues Karl Rove and Colin Powell, who pointed out that the "policies with which we greet them [immigrants] are, in important ways, self-fulfilling." Former Republican National Committee (RNC) Chair Jim Nicholson also urged Republicans to "review" their position on immigration. Sen. Mel Martinez (R-FL), who many speculate as having resigned from his post as RNC Chairman due to his party's immigration stance, warned that the GOP will be "relegated to minority status" if it continues its anti-Latino rhetoric.
LOOKING TOWARDS 2012: Some Republican leaders who are eying the 2012 elections are taking his advice. Rumored presidential hopeful former Florida governor Jeb Bush recently told Esquire magazine that Republicans need to establish a "new tone" on immigration that doesn't pit Latinos and immigrants against the GOP. Along those lines, Bush co-chaired a report released last week by the Council on Foreign Relations that recommends implementing comprehensive immigration reform consistent with American values and includes an "earned" path to legalization. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, another rumored presidential hopeful who once bitterly slammed bilingual education, appeared on Univision's "Al Punto" with Jorge Ramos and has started a Spanish website and twitter feed. Another likely 2012 GOP contender, Mitt Romney -- who took a strong anti-immigrant stance in the Republican primaries -- is still advising his party to stick to its immigration principles. However, he has conceded that those principles need to be communicated in a "more effective way" because Republicans actually "celebrate immigrants." In April, he said "one way to attract more minorities to the GOP is to pass immigration reform before the next election." Though mostly mum on the subject, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin (R) once cited the "Hispanic vote" as one of the main reasons she and John McCain were defeated in last year's presidential election.
Article continues on The Progress Report