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The GOP Turning
Away the
Hispanic Vote
"This survey has become the most reliable and accurate study on Hispanic political and consumer behavior in the U.S. The 2004 National Latino Survey was dead-on accurate in predicting the Latino vote in the 2004 elections," said TLC President Robert Deposada. "We predicted the nine-point spread between Senator Kerry and President Bush, while all other surveys predicted a Kerry win of over 30 points. The results of this year's survey offer similar surprising results and highlight the future trends of Latino adults and Latino voters in the U.S. However, contrary to past years these trends spell trouble for the Republican Party." Trouble for the GOP? First you have to look at "Hispanic registered voters.""Hispanic registered voters are strongly supporting initiatives to reform immigration while penalizing illegal behavior. A majority of Hispanic voters (52.4 percent) support initiatives that would not allow people who entered this county illegally to become citizens unless they reapply from their country of origin," Deposada said. "By a margin of 50 percent to 41 percent, Hispanic voters support increasing the number of border patrol agents in our southern border, and also support new laws to make sure that employers can only hire workers who are in the U.S. legally (50 percent to 41 percent). An overwhelming majority of 82 percent support the creation of a new Temporary Worker Program. Also a plurality (41.2 percent to 39.9 percent) support imposing a fine of at least $2,000 for illegal immigrants in order to gain legal employment as a temporary worker in the U.S." But, as TLC points out, there's another subset of Hispanics in the country. The unregistred voter."Meanwhile, non-registered Latinos have completely different views on these issues," Deposada added. "They overwhelmingly oppose laws to make sure that employers can only hire legal immigrants (65 percent to 28 percent); oppose increasing the number of border patrol agents along our southern border (61 percent to 29 percent); and they support allowing illegal immigrants to have access to citizenship (50 percent to 40 percent)." "While there has been enormous progress for the
Republican Party under President George W. Bush, there is real danger for a
repeat of the Pete Wilson era that alienated Hispanics from the GOP for years,"
Deposada added. "If the Republican leadership in Congress allows an extremist
group to control the debate over immigration reform and put partisan rhetoric
over real commonsense legislation, the GOP will eliminate all the progress
achieved by President Bush in attracting Hispanics into the GOP." That's politics. Immigration is going to be one of the hottest issues in the '08 election since the '04 election. The candidate who seizes on it early and puts forward a plank that reflects the Hispanic registered-voters position is the candidate which will take their party's nomination and, most likely, the White House. Not only is it an economic issue, but it is also a national security issue. |
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