Washington Times
By Seth McLaughlin
March 18, 2014
Republican
Party chief Reince Priebus said Tuesday that the GOP can make big gains
among Hispanic voters even if it doesn’t support legalizing illegal
immigrants, as long
as the party finds better messengers and tones down anti-immigrant
rhetoric.
A
year after the Republican National Committee released a report saying
it needed to do more to win Hispanic voters, GOP lawmakers in Congress
are divided over what to
do about illegal immigration. But Mr. Priebus said they don’t need to
solve that issue in order to make gains with Latinos.
“I
think we do need to tackle this issue and I think there is general
agreement in the party that that needs to happen, but I would say there
is no agreement to what exactly
that package looks like,” Mr. Priebus said at a breakfast sponsored by
the Christian Science Monitor.
“But
there is also a leap of logic that some people make in that they assume
it is the policy that simply drives the improvement — or will drive the
improvement for the
Republican Party.”
After
the GOP stumbled in 2012, many national party leaders and elected
officials said they needed to finally embrace broad immigration reform
that included legalizing
illegal immigrants.
But
with action stalled in the Republican-led House, Mr. Priebus argued
Tuesday that they don’t actually need to pass a bill to reap some
benefits.
Democrats, though, said Mr. Priebus fails to grasp the importance of immigration as a threshold issue for Hispanics.
“Republicans
throwing a few outreach staffers around the country in communities they
have not been in doesn’t change the fact that they don’t have that
grass-roots culture
embedded deeply in their party as evidenced by a lot of things they say
and the policies they propose,” Democratic National Committee
Chairwoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz said.
“Until
the GOP changes their core policies, no report or rhetoric, training or
staff, will change their electoral outcome,” she said.
The
back-and-forth came on the one-year anniversary of the RNC’s Growth and
Opportunity Project report, which provided a series of recommendations
on how Republicans could
rebound from the disappointing 2012 results, when President Obama won a
second term by besting GOP nominee Mitt Romney, including winning
Hispanics, 71 percent to 27 percent.
The
report suggested the party beef up its outreach efforts in minority
communities, field more Hispanic candidates and soften their rhetoric on
immigration, pointing
specifically to Mr. Romney’s stiff positions on enforcement of
immigration laws as detrimental.
“If
Hispanic-Americans perceive that the a GOP nominee or candidates does
not want them in the United States (i.e., self-deportation), they will
not pay attention to our
next sentence,” the report said. “It does not matter what we say about
education, jobs or the economy; if Hispanics think we do not want them
here, they will close their ears to our policies.”
Mr.
Priebus said if Republicans can tone down their rhetoric, they have a
chance to reach at least naturally conservative Hispanics — as long as
they invest time and money
in making the outreach.
“What
I will tell you is that actually 37 percent of Hispanics identify
themselves as conservatives,” Mr. Priebus said. “But if we don’t go into
Hispanic communities on
a year-round basis and explain what it is that we believe as a party,
then those dots can never be connected.”
“So
that’s what I am saying,” he said. “I am saying our fundamental issue
is if you are not in the community, addressing the community, then you
are not going to see the
improvement that you have coming your way by simply being who you are.”
Izzy
Santa, the RNC’s Hispanic media communications director, said the RNC
has hired upwards of 20 staffers in 10 states focusing on Hispanic
outreach and has contacted
more than 74,000 Latino voters.
They also have launched paid media ads on Spanish language radio stations, including the latest which promoted school choice.
But
Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voices, a lobby group
that favors a path to citizenship, warned that the RNC’s outreach effort
could stall out, because
the issue of immigration reform is a “litmus test issue for most Latino
and for many Asian-American voters.”
“It’s
a gateway issue in much the same way that pro-Israel position is for
many Jewish voters, a pro-life stance is for many social conservative
and support for civil
rights is for African-American voters,” Mr. Sharry said. “It’s
impossible to close the so-called ‘communications gap’ with the fastest
growing groups of voters in America when your inaction on immigration
reform and the rhetoric of your hard-liners screams
‘we don’t like your kind.’”
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