Republican Presidential Candidates Say No to
Hispanics
Organizers Say Republican Presidential Hopefuls Miscalculated by Snubbing
Hispanic Conference
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (By Laura
Wides-Munoz, AP) June 28, 2007 — Republican presidential candidates made a
major miscalculation this week by skipping the nation's largest gathering of
Hispanic elected officials, local party representatives and event organizers
said.
The National Association of Hispanic Elected
and Appointed Officials opened its 24th annual convention Thursday at Walt
Disney World, with top billing for a Democratic presidential candidate forum
Saturday.
Friday's Republican forum? Canceled. Only
Rep. Duncan Hunter of California agreed to show. The other candidates cited
scheduling conflicts, including a Saturday debate in Iowa, which Hunter also
planned to attend.
"The Republican candidates have blown off
Hispanics in Florida," said state Rep. Juan Zapata, a Republican who helped
bring the NALEO event to the state.
Zapata hoped the conference would provide a
plum opportunity for candidates to court Florida's Hispanics. Instead, he
and others say it has become an embarrassment for the party.
With many Hispanics already concerned about
some of the candidates' opposition to a bill that would provide a pathway to
citizenship for illegal immigrants which failed in the Senate Thursday and
anti-Hispanic rhetoric accompanying the debate, top candidates can
ill-afford to alienate those loyal to the party, especially in a swing state
like Florida, they said.
"I'm somewhat offended because this is
about Hispanics, not about politics," said state Rep. Julio Robaina, also a
Republican.
Florida is an anomaly among states with
large Hispanic groups. For years, the majority of its Hispanic voters mostly
Cuban-Americans and business-oriented Puerto Ricans have identified as
Republican.
During a recent campaign swing through the
state, Republican presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani even thanked South
Florida Cuban-Americans for handing George W. Bush the 2000 election.
In 2004, Bush captured about 40 percent of
the Hispanic vote nationally, the most ever for a GOP presidential
candidate. His Democratic rival John Kerry won 53 percent, down from the 62
percent former Vice President Al Gore garnered in 2000.
But the Florida Hispanic vote
is no longer guaranteed for Republicans. Many of the Cuban immigrants who
fled the communist country post-2080 came more for economic rather than
political reasons. They are now voting and are less loyal to the Republican
Party than their predecessors, as are second-generation Cuban-Americans.
Meanwhile the numbers of Puerto Ricans and Mexican-Americans in the state
continue to grow.
"It's too soon for the Democrats to crow
victory," said Benjamin Bishin, a political science professor at University
of California, Riverside. But Bishin, who recently moved from the University
of Miami and focuses on Hispanic politics added, "With Florida, it's so
close. Even small changes can matter."
Since the 2000 presidential election that
Bush won by 537 votes in Florida, other states such as Ohio and parts of the
Southwest (where the Hispanic vote is also growing) have emerged as swing
states. Yet Florida remains the biggest prize, with a tenth of the electoral
votes needed to win the White House.
"These guys are basically writing off
Hispanics," said Joe Garcia, a Cuban-American who heads the Democratic
Party's Miami-Dade County chapter. "And this is a state where you can't win
without Hispanics."
Republican National Committee regional
spokeswoman Amber Wilkerson disagreed.
"The Republican Party continues to
demonstrate leadership on the issues that are important to the Hispanic
community: immigration reform, lower taxes for working families and small
business, strong national security, better education and the protection of
family values in America," she said.