Look at what
happened in
Florida and
Arizona, the
two states
with heavy
Hispanic
populations
that held
primary
votes
Tuesday for
November's
mid-term
congressional
and
gubernatorial
elections.
In both
states, some
of the most
closely
watched
Republican
primaries
were won by
hard-liners
who support
Arizona-style
anti-immigration
laws, or by
moderates
who shifted
to the right
and backed
tougher
anti-immigration
laws shortly
before the
vote under
pressure
from the
conservative
wing of
their party.
How are
these
Republican
candidates
going to woo
Hispanic
voters in
November?
Granted,
Hispanics
nationwide
vote heavily
Democratic
President
Barack Obama
won 67
percent of
the Hispanic
vote in
2008, and
Democratic
presidential
candidate
John Kerry
had won 59
percent of
the Hispanic
vote in 2004
but
Republican
candidates
in most of
the
country's
largest
states can't
win without
a sizable
minority of
the Latino
vote.
Easy
Prediction
You don't
have to be a
political
wizard to
figure that
Democrats
will put out
ads in
Hispanic
media in
coming weeks
painting
Republicans
as the
anti-Hispanic
party that
wants to
enact
Arizona-styled
laws
throughout
the country
and that is
calling for
denying U.S.
citizenship
to U.S.-born
children of
undocumented
residents.
And they
will have
plenty of
primary-race
TV footage
to back up
their
claims.
That's bound
to energize
Hispanic
voters to
get out to
the polls
and vote
Democratic
in November,
when the
Obama
administration
will
desperately
need them to
avert a
possible
Republican
takeover of
Congress.
The Arizona
law
temporarily
suspended by
a judge
demands that
local police
arrest
people
suspected of
not having
immigration
papers after
making a
lawful stop.
It has
triggered
widespread
fear that
police will
stop anybody
looking
Hispanic,
including
U.S.-born
Latinos.
A Key
Winner
One of the
key winners
of Tuesday's
primaries
was
Florida's
Republican
candidate
for governor
Rick Scott,
who in
part thanks
to his hard
line on
immigration
defeated
Attorney
General Bill
McCollum.
Scott, a
healthcare
mogul who
spent $50
million of
his own
money on the
campaign,
strongly
supported an
Arizona-style
law for
Florida.
In addition
to his other
troubles
his company
was involved
in one of
the
country's
biggest
healthcare
fraud
scandals and
paid $1.7
billion in
fines
Scott will
find it hard
to win a
substantial
minority of
Hispanic
votes,
without
which he is
unlikely to
win the
general
election,
Democratic
strategists
say.
``The
Republican
Party has
gone so far
to the right
on
immigration,
that you
can't get
elected in
the
primaries
without
taking a
position on
immigration
that's
anathema in
the general
elections,''
says
Democratic
pollster
Fernand
Amandi. He
adds that
while more
than half of
Americans
support the
Arizona law,
more than 60
percent
support a
comprehensive
immigration
reform that
would
include some
kind of path
toward
legalization
for
undocumented
immigrants.
In addition
to
energizing
Hispanic
Democrats,
the
Republican
candidates'
pro-Arizona
stands in
the
primaries
may lead
many
Hispanic
Republicans
to stay at
home in
November.
McCollum,
who was
backed by
the national
and state
Republican
establishment,
may have
lost the
Republican
primary race
precisely
because he
embraced the
Arizona law.
That may
have led him
to lose key
Hispanic
support in
Miami-Dade
County.
No Shows
Key state
Republican
leaders such
as former
governor Jeb
Bush, or
Miami Reps.
Ileana Ross
Lehtinen and
Lincoln Diaz
Balart did
not actively
campaign for
McCollum
among their
Hispanic
constituencies,
according to
some
Republican
strategists.
As a result,
the overall
turnout in
heavily
Hispanic
Dade County
a McCollum
stronghold
in Tuesday's
primary was
only 17
percent,
against a
statewide
turnout of
21 percent,
they say.
``The worst
mistake in
McCollum's
political
career was
the
ridiculous
political
ploy of
presenting
an
Arizona-like
law two
weeks before
the
election,''
says
Republican
fundraiser
Ana Navarro.
``It was
seen as
pandering to
the right
wing, and it
turned off
Hispanic
voters.''
My opinion:
While polls
show that
Republicans
will do well
in November
because of
the
country's
overall
unhappiness
with the
economy and
high
unemployment,
the
anti-immigration
rhetoric
will cost
them many
Hispanic
votes.
I, for one,
will find it
hard to vote
for
Republican
candidates
unless the
party
abandons its
one-sided
immigration
stance. The
Republican
Party has
done serious
damage to
itself, and
it will have
a hard time
undoing it,
even if it
tries to
shift to the
center
between now
and
November.