Buzzfeed News
By Adrian Carrasquillo
June 8, 2015
Jeb
Bush’s new campaign manager Danny Diaz spoke out against driver’s
licenses for undocumented immigrants last year, a policy the former
Florida governor has supported
for more than a decade.
Bush,
who is expected to announce his campaign on June 15, has been an ardent
supporter of an immigration overhaul for years and the naming of Diaz —
most recently a veteran
of New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez’s re-election campaign — is yet
another sign he will make Hispanic outreach a priority.
But
the two have advocated different policies in the past. In 2014, as a
Martinez campaign official, he said giving driver’s licenses to
undocumented immigrants was “dangerous.”
“This
fall, voters will have a choice,” Diaz told the Santa Fe New Mexican.
“Do they support a candidate who believes giving driver’s licenses to
illegal immigrants, creating
a well-established public safety threat, is a good idea, or do they
support the candidate who has fought against it?”
Bush
has long supported the policy. In 2004, when he endorsed legislation to
give licenses to undocumented immigrants, he said policies that ignore
them are basically
a policy of denial.
“In
some cases, these people may be taking their children to school and
they may be doing it without a driver’s license,” he said at the time.
“They may be going to a
doctor or a drug store or supermarket. The state … is basically telling
these folks to drive illegally.”
Emily
Benavides, a spokesperson for Bush, emphasized to BuzzFeed News that
Diaz will be advocating for the candidate’s positions.
“Danny
will forcefully advocate for Gov. Bush’s views across the board and
helm a campaign focused on giving all Americans the chance to rise up
and achieve their dreams,”
she said.
In
addition to working for Martinez and now Bush, Diaz has a long history
working on presidential campaigns. He was a senior adviser to Mitt
Romney in 2012, deputy communications
director for John McCain in 2008, and a regional press secretary for
George W. Bush in 2004.
Diaz
is known as a top rapid response operative and opposition researcher,
something those who have worked with him say is encoded in his DNA, and
will help Bush run a
modern campaign.
“With
Diaz it was always nonstop,” said Wadi Gaitan, who worked with him on
the Romney campaign. “It doesn’t matter if it’s day or night, he’s
working.”
On
his stances that have been criticized by fellow Republicans like Common
Core education standards and on immigration, Bush has said he believes
Americans appreciate
when you have “a backbone.”
“You don’t abandon your core beliefs,” he said earlier this year.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com



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