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Raul A. Reyes

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Losing Latino Votes

Posted: 09/07/2012 4:35 pm

2012-09-05-sPAULRYANTAXRETURNSlarge.jpegThe more we know about Ryan, the more obvious it becomes that he and Romney aren't a winning combination for America.

Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney's running mate, received a rapturous welcome at the Republican National Convention in Tampa. The audience cheered as he assailed President Barack Obama's record. Ryan seemed boisterous and full of energy. He could almost pass for one of Romney's sons.

As a Latino voter, I was surprised that Romney chose Ryan as his Veep, when he has struggled to connect with Hispanics. Until recently, I knew little about this Generation X lawmaker from Janesville, Wisconsin.

So, who is Paul Ryan? Democrats say he's the bogeyman who wants to end Medicare. Republicans say he's the new face of the GOP. Unfortunately, they're both right. Ryan has radical views about our country's future, and his ideas would have severe consequences for Latinos -- the nation's largest and fastest-growing minority group.

Like Romney, Ryan is an immigration hardliner. He opposes the DREAM Act, a measure that helps young people brought here without documents as children earn citizenship. In 2005, Ryan supported a bill that would've criminalized all undocumented immigrants. He once said that "anchor babies cost money," using an offensive term for children born in the United States to parents without papers. Instead of being inclusive, Ryan reinforces the Republican Party's negative image among Hispanics as hostile to immigrants.

Ryan is best known for his proposals to slash government spending. His budget would turn Medicare into a voucher system, drastically cut social services, and give tax breaks to the wealthy -- all without actually reducing the deficit. Ryan is going to have a hard time selling Hispanics on this. According to the polling company Latino Decisions, 73 percent of Hispanics oppose cutting Medicare to balance the budget, while 83 percent favor raising taxes on the wealthy to do so.

Ryan's plan would disproportionately impact the most vulnerable Americans. He wants to repeal the Affordable Care Act. He wants to cut funding for Pell Grants and food stamps, and turn Medicaid over to the states. Again, these are ideas opposed by Hispanics. An April poll by the Pew Center found that 75 percent of Latinos, in these hard economic times, favor a bigger government with more services, not a smaller government offering less.

Millions of Latino families and seniors, in fact, depend on the safety net that Ryan wants to slash. The National Council of La Raza, the American Association of Retired Persons, and the National Association for the Hispanic Elderly all agree that the Ryan budget would be harmful to Latinos.

It's ironic that Ryan considers "big government" to be a problem because he has spent just about his entire adult life in the public sector. He's a seven-term congressman who has been in Washington since college, aside from a short stint with his family's business. He criticizes the deficit that he helped create by voting for the war in Iraq, the bank bailout, and the Bush tax cuts.

True, Ryan is a fresh face with a friendly persona. But looks can be deceiving. Ryan is a devout Catholic, yet his budget has been denounced by the U.S. Council of Catholic Bishops as "unjustified and wrong." His family's construction business was built upon public works projects such as highways, airports, and defense contracts -- the type of government spending that Ryan now opposes. Ryan's budget itself is a rehash of failed Reagan-era policies. Ronald Reagan's former budget guru David Stockman recently called the Ryan budget "phony" and "devoid of credible math or hard policy choices."

Though Romney has lately tried to distance himself from Ryan's budget, he has not put forth one of his own. For all purposes, Ryan's plan is Romney's plan, one with deeply negative implications for Hispanics, the middle class, seniors, and the poor. And the more we know about Ryan, the more obvious it becomes that he and Romney aren't a winning combination for America.

Cross-posted at OtherWords.org

 

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FOLLOW LATINO VOICES
The more we know about Ryan, the more obvious it becomes that he and Romney aren't a winning combination for America. Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney's running mate, received a rapturous welcome at the Republ...
The more we know about Ryan, the more obvious it becomes that he and Romney aren't a winning combination for America. Paul Ryan, Mitt Romney's running mate, received a rapturous welcome at the Republ...
 
 
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06:04 AM on 09/13/2012
Republicans cannot lose Latino voters because it never has received many Latino votes.

Latinos are some of the most liberal voters in the U.S. and demand a big, high spending government along with demanding quotas, set asides, and affirmative action. No conservative party is capable of reaching Latinos.

The question for the future is what will happen to Latinos in politics as the U.S. becomes a one party state with high taxes, a bigger government, and a shrinking private sector.
08:55 AM on 09/10/2012
And another thing..your support for Obama has raised the unemployment for hispanics to the highest level in history...IN HISTORY...are your waxy ears open? if i was was hispanic i'd run your butt out of town suggesting fellow hispanics vote for Obama.
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inthedesert
Those who never question will fall for anything.
06:48 PM on 09/09/2012
Um....they would most definitely NOT be a "winning combination" for the millions and millions of illegalsl in America from Mexico. That is for sure! So, for this reason alone, I would vote for them. With another 4 years of BO, the illegals are hoping for another general amnesty which will let them totally off the hook for being here illegally. I sure hope Americans don't let this happen.
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Viper1st
multi quasi faceted
04:59 AM on 09/09/2012
Are Not ~ Democrats considered "immigration hardliners"?

Don't see Republicans forceably deporting illegals = 1 every 79 seconds