Politico
By Ben Schreckinger
October 1, 2015
If Donald Trump thought Megyn Kelly was tough, he should get ready for the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce.
Next
Thursday, the businessman will sit down with the group to answer some
questions, and its leaders are making it clear that that interview will
not be easy.
“We’re
not going to go easy on him. A lot of people think it’s just going to
be this positive thing,” said the group’s communications director, Ammar
Campa-Najjar, who
went on to share some choice words about the businessman, his ideas and
his candidacy. They included “sad,” “absurd” and “broken.”
“I’ve
been tight-lipped for a while, but I’ve got to speak up now,” said
Campa-Najjar. “It would be funny if it wasn’t so sad that this man is
leading in the polls and
that this is his idea for a fiscally responsible, fair and feasible
plan for dealing with immigrants.”
Citing
its $400 billion price tag, Campa-Najjar said Trump’s immigration plan
is a fiscal loser. He added, “The deporting thing is so absurd that no
one can get behind
it and he needs to explain how that’s going to work.”
Campa-Najjar
also dismissed the Trump campaign’s claims that Trump already enjoys
support among many Hispanics and his belief that he will win over many
others.
“When
we talk to them, they give the impression they’re doing so well with
Hispanics: ‘Oh Hispanics love me,’ and I think that’s, at best, out of
touch with reality,”
he said.
Campa-Najjar
pointed to the small sample of a July poll, oft-cited by Trump, that
shows him winning Hispanic Republicans in Nevada with 31 percent
support. “Congratulations,
you got 80 Hispanics to say they support you,” he said. “There’s 55
million Hispanics, and you need 47 percent of the Hispanic votes to win
the White House, according to some estimates.”
“What
we’re hearing is he has virtually no chance of winning back support
from the Hispanic business community,” said Campa-Najjar. “That’s
putting it mildly — he never
had it. At best, he could clarify his stance.”
A Trump campaign spokeswoman did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The
Hispanic Chamber’s president and CEO, Javier Palomarez, also said Trump
was in for rigorous questioning. “We will challenge Mr. Trump on his
views. We’ll challenge
him on his rhetoric. We intend to have a very candid discussion,”
Palomarez said. “He claims he’s been mischaracterized so this will give
him an opportunity to set the record straight, and we’ll allow our
constituency of business owners and executives to be
the judge and jury of Donald Trump and his words.”
Citing
a shared interest in business, Campa-Najjar predicted that Trump and
the chamber’s members could also reach some common ground. “I’m sure
we’ll find some things
that we don’t outright disagree with,” he said. “A broken clock is
right twice a day.”
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