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Mexican Invasion Title: Romney hire means shift on Hispanics (surenders to Aztlan) Mitt Romneys hiring of Republican strategist Ed Gillespie is being seen as a sign the campaign will heavily court Hispanic voters perhaps at the expense of immigration hard-liners in the party. Gillespie, a former head of the Republican National Committee, has long advocated an aggressive outreach to the Hispanic community. He helped found the Republican State Leadership Committee, a group that recruits and trains GOP candidates for office and has emphasized finding female and minority candidates. He also heads up Resurgent Republic, an organization focused on messaging to independents, including Hispanic swing voters. When asked for an interview, Gillespie directed The Hill to Romneys presidential campaign, which said hed be a senior adviser that will help them with messaging, overall strategy and the August convention in Tampa, Fla. They declined to give any further details on his role. Gillespie has been seen as having a more centrist approach on illegal immigration, even when many in the party wanted to take a hard-line stance on the issue, driving away Hispanic voters in the process. He was RNC chairman during former President George W. Bushs 2004 reelection, when Viva Bush signs popped up across the Southwest and in Florida, and advised the White House during Bushs push for a comprehensive immigration reform law. He later took on a more prominent role in the Bush White House. Hispanics make up a large and growing part of the U.S. electorate, and are especially important in swing states in the Southwest, as well as Florida and Virginia. The RNC is highly aware of this, and on Monday announced it would have state-level Hispanic outreach directors placed in Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico, Florida, Virginia and North Carolina. But Romney has a long way to go with Hispanic voters a March poll from Fox News had President Obama leading Romney among Hispanic voters by 70 percent to 14, a number that, if it holds, all but guarantees Obamas reelection. Bush received approximately 40 percent of the Hispanic vote in 2004, while Arizona Sen. John McCain the GOPs 2008 nominee received 31 percent despite his longtime support of immigration reform, which many strategists say cost him several Western states. Earlier this year, at the RNCs annual meeting, Gillespie warned that if the GOP didnt improve its standing with Hispanics it would be in trouble this election and for the foreseeable future. He pointed out that, with the current demographic trends, if Republicans win the same percentage of minorities that McCain did in the last presidential election, theyll lose the White House by 14 points in 2020. Well be in a situation where Florida wont be a swing state Texas will be a swing state. And thats a tough row to hoe in the Electoral College, Gillespie said at the time. The demographic challenges before us, if were not thoughtful as a party and were not thoughtful as we talk about policies, will be a real long-term challenge for us as well. Establishment members of the party praised Gillespies hiring. Hes going to be great as a key figure in the Romney campaign, RNC Chairman Reince Priebus told The Hill on Monday. Ed brings a pretty big background in understanding and being an effective communicator in the Hispanic community and that can only be a positive. Some signs of a shift in Romneys tone have already emerged since his status as the presumptive nominee has become stronger. The former Massachusetts governor warned during a private fundraiser this past weekend that his standing in polls with Hispanics spells doom for us, and that to alleviate the problem the GOP needed to offer its own policies to woo Hispanics. His suggestions included a Republican DREAM Act, referring to a GOP version of the Democratic plan that would give some illegal immigrants who came here as children a path to citizenship. While he was not advocating for a specific policy, the comments were a sharp break from Romneys rhetoric during the primary, when he said he would veto the DREAM Act and attacked Texas Gov. Rick Perry (R) for backing a state law that gave illegal immigrants in-state college tuition, calling it a magnet for more illegal immigration. Despite the Romney campaigns emphasis on a Monday conference call that he was just discussing ideas that were coming up on the campaign trial, Romneys ruminations sounded very similar to recent comments from Sen. Marco Rubio. The Florida Republican, who is a leading potential vice presidential candidate, suggested a new version of the DREAM Act, which would allow for permanent residency but not provide a path to citizenship. Gillespies hiring is being viewed as a counter to hard-line advisers in the Romney camp, including Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach (R), who wrote Arizonas controversial immigration law. Republican strategists predicted that Gillespies gravitas would make him influential within the Romney campaign, outweighing the more-conservative voices on the issue. Ed Gillespie has the foresight and influence to guide the Republican Party leadership and also the rank-and-file grassroots activists along the lines of building a larger majority and bringing a lot of people together, said GOP strategist Leslie Sanchez. Many Hispanic swing voters, especially second- and third-generation Mexican-Americans in the Southwest, are more focused on the economy, but bristle if they feel theyre being intentionally targeted on immigration, said Sanchez. She said Romney needed to lay out his policies soon. Romney must soon come forward with a strong, well developed solution and a timeline for immigration reform. The risk in not doing so is it allows others on the left to define it for him, she said. The good news is theres an incredibly receptive, open-minded independent Latino voting bloc that has yet to form a solid opinion about Romney and his solutions to improve the economic strength of our country.
Poster Comment: Usually GOP candidates tack to the right up until the convention, then left for the general election. If Mitt is this far left before the GOP convention, just imagine how far he'll go if he's nominated.
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#2. To: hondo68 (#0)
The GOP is doing everything it can to lose another election.
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