2016 Postmortem
Related: About this forumRomney's Latino Problem
http://www.boomantribune.com/story/2012/5/9/104229/5980Romney's Latino Problem
by BooMan
Wed May 9th, 2012 at 10:42:29 AM EST
It's hard to exaggerate what an unholy mess Mitt Romney has made for himself on the issue of Latino immigration. He really has two big problems. First, he's said what he's said, and his positions on immigration, amnesty, and deportations are all in the public record. To say those positions are a major turnoff to the Latino community would be a major understatement. His second problem is the fundamental dishonesty of what he's trying to do in attacking Obama's record. He has surrogates out there serving as directors of outreach to the Latino community who are blaming the president for not passing an immigration reform bill and for deporting too many people. Those would be fair criticisms if it wasn't the near-unaimous opposition from the Republicans that prevented Obama from signing a bill, and if Romney didn't plan to deport far more people with far less discretion than Obama.
One outreach director got so flummoxed over these contradictions that she blurted out the following nonsense:
This is similar to the difficulty the Obama administration is having explaining his "evolving" views on gay marriage. But, with Obama, his ambivalence is an isolated case. Romney can't afford to continually reinforce his reputation as a flip-flopper who always puts his finger in the wind before taking a position on an issue. He came out too strongly against any kind of humane immigration policy to pivot now without incurring a tremendous cost. No one will believe that his new, softer positions are anything other than pure cynicism.
This is a guy who just tried to take credit for saving the auto industry he sought to destroy. He's willing to say anything , no matter how preposterous. But that's not a good thing.
1StrongBlackMan
(31,849 posts)As of today ... that is no longer a problem!
ellisonz
(27,711 posts)RZM
(8,556 posts)Outreach to the Latino community will NEVER be a winner for Republicans. Some Republicans (like George W. Bush) honestly believed in it. But Mitt is an interesting test case here. Since he's an etch-a-sketch without a genuine personal position on immigration, he's free to pick whatever will most benefit his chances. And I believe his relatively harsh stance is an example of that.
Talking tough on immigration will help him much more than mealy-mouthed Republican minority outreach that never turns anybody. He could proclaim undying love for the immigrant population and convert to Catholicism and they'd still vote overwhelmingly Democratic. That's why he has done what he did. The slightest change in his favor with the white vote still means much more than a sea-change in the still relatively small Latino vote.