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Big Empty
04-01-2014, 04:45 PM
http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politics/2014/04/01/paul-says-gop-must-appeal-to-hispanics-get-beyond-deportation/


Kentucky GOP Sen. Rand Paul told fellow Republicans on Tuesday that the future of their party depends on them connecting with Hispanics in a more empathetic way and on getting in front of immigration reform – a message that further signals his flirtation with a 2016 presidential run.
“If we are to change people’s attitudes toward … the Republican Party, we have to show up and we have to have something to say,” Paul told a small group of conservatives gathered at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. “I hope to be part of that dialogue.”
This certainly was not the first time that Paul, since being elected to the Senate in 2010, has attempted to connect with Hispanics and other minorities.
However, Republicans’ interest in his policy vision and his vision for broadening the party base continues to grow as he ascends in the very, very early 2016 polls and travels the country. Recent stops have included those in Democrat-heavy Detroit and at the University of California, Berkeley.
Paul said Tuesday that Republicans need to focus on such issues as reforming the country’s work visa system and improving educational and employment opportunities for minorities.
However, the GOP must first make clear it is not “just the party of deportation,” he argued.
“The bottom line is that the Hispanic community … is not going to hear us until we get beyond that issue,” Paul told attendees at a symposium sponsored by the conservative Media Research Center and the American Principles Project. “They’re not going to care whether we go to the same church or have the same values or believe in the same kind of future of the country until we get beyond that. … We’ve got to get beyond deportation to get to the rest of the issues.”
He attempted to highlight his point, in part, by noting that 2012 GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney at one point touted the idea of self-deportation, and won just 27 percent of the Hispanic vote.
Paul, 51, expressed some optimism about Congress accomplishing some type of immigration reform this year, particularly one expanding the country’s work visa program.
He called the expansion of visas for high-tech workers “a no-brainer.”
Paul spoke as his profile continues to rise as a potential 2016 contender, and amid efforts to court donors, assemble a nationwide support network and win the confidence of Washington Republicans wary of his less-mainstream, more-libertarian views.
Paul’s message also comes amid criticism that neither party has really gone beyond election-year efforts to win the support of Hispanics.
Alfonso Aguilar, executive director of the Latino Partnership for Conservative Principles, told the Newseum audience that conservatives and Republicans “haven’t been very consistent” in their effort.
“And we don’t need to pander to them like the left,” he said.
Paul said a lack of empathy among Republicans has hurt efforts to connect with minorities and the working class and that Democrats have always been better in this area.
“I’ve been saying over and over that the Republican Party cannot win until it’s more diverse, until it looks like the rest of America,” he said.

boutons_deux
04-01-2014, 04:49 PM
militarize the border

build the fences higher, longer

continue to do nothing about undoc immigrants

screw up the Dream Act

yep, superb Repug reachout to Hispanics.

leemajors
04-01-2014, 08:04 PM
lip service comin

ElNono
04-01-2014, 08:24 PM
Rand understands the dynamics at play, which is a good, positive first step.

Winehole23
04-01-2014, 08:51 PM
about time, tbh

Nbadan
04-01-2014, 10:30 PM
...truth is a lot of poorer border residents want tighter restrictions on immigration and border enforcement.....it's the richer border labor market that promotes illegal immigration...if Illegals couldn't find jobs, they'd stay in Central and South America and immigrate legally...

Nbadan
04-01-2014, 10:33 PM
...but yeah, without splitting the Hispanic vote, the GOP clock is running down in TX.......gonna spread from locally...were Dems already rule in larger cities ...to State offices...Abbott is trying to court Hispanics....whether it's working is debatable...

Wild Cobra
04-01-2014, 10:44 PM
Why do people start threads with misleading titles?

This isn't about Mexicans (illegal aliens) it's about Americans of Latino decent.

Are you liberals being intellectually dishonest, or too ignorant to know the difference?

Nbadan
04-01-2014, 11:47 PM
GOP’s hideous strategy to survive as the “white party” - By Joan Walsh
Trifecta of voter suppression, despair and gerrymandering means a plan with no new ideas. But also: No new voters!
JOAN WALSH



Republicans like to think of themselves as the Christian party, so it never entirely made sense that they oppose what’s become known as “Souls to the Polls,” a big push by black churches on the Sundays before Election Day to bring worshippers directly from the pews to the polls in states with early voting. But of course they oppose it, because their love of Jesus comes second to their love of discouraging African-Americans from exercising their right to vote.

So after Wisconsin went overwhelmingly for President Obama with a strong black turnout in 2008, GOP legislators cut the number of early voting days in half, and specifically closed the polls on the Sunday before the election. But black voters struck back by shifting “Souls to the Polls” to two Sundays before Election Day in 2012. And it worked. After an inspiring Milwaukee rally outside the county building, lines to obtain ballots and then to cast them stretched down hallways and snaked around corners. For hours, every voting booth was full. Families came with tiny children, many still dressed for church. I noted at the time “it was the Obama coalition in microcosm – mostly younger whites, women and African-Americans.”

Obama won the state again, this time more narrowly, thanks to continued strong African-American turnout. The Republican plan didn’t work.

Now Wisconsin Republicans have done away with “Souls to the Polls” entirely. Thanks to a bill just signed by Gov. Scott Walker, there’s no weekend voting in Wisconsin at all anymore, even though research shows weekend voters are younger, poorer and less white. Scratch that: It’s not “even though”; it’s specifically because they’re younger, poorer and – especially – less white.

more
http://www.salon.com/2014/04/01/gops_hideous_strategy_to_survive_as_the_white_part y/