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Raul A. Reyes

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Rick Perry, a Lousy Amigo

Posted: 09/13/11 08:11 PM ET

Texas Governor Rick Perry had a busy summer. In July, he told reporters he felt "called" to run for president. In August, he hosted "The Response," a prayer rally that drew thousands of people to a Houston stadium. By September, he had thrown his Stetson hat in the ring and was leading the race for the Republican presidential nomination.

As a Latino, I've followed Perry's swift rise to national prominence with interest. Among the major GOP contenders, only Perry hails from a state with a sizable Hispanic population, the nation's second-largest. Unfortunately, Perry's record on issues that concern the Latino community is very troubling. It makes me want to shout, "Not so fast, cowboy!"

Perry once seemed like a moderate amigo. He signed a bill allowing undocumented immigrants to get in-state tuition rates for college. He called the border fence "nonsense" and said that an Arizona-style immigration law wouldn't be a good fit for Texas.

More recently, however, Perry signed into law a voter ID act, which is likely to disenfranchise poor and minority voters. He approved a redistricting plan that undermines the voting strength of Latinos. His top priority in the last legislative session was pushing a failed "sanctuary cities" bill, aimed at making life harder for undocumented immigrants. San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro called Perry's recent record "easily the most anti-Latino agenda in more than a generation, without shame."

So what changed? Perry's ambitions. Now that he's seeking national office, he's throwing Latinos under the bus to gain support from the Tea Party and far-right conservatives. And things look even worse when we review the results of his 11-year tenure as governor.

Perry points to the so-called "Texas Miracle" of low unemployment and steady job growth as one of his chief accomplishments. True, unemployment in the Lone Star State is 8.4 percent, below the national 9.1 percent average. But the Latino unemployment rate in Texas is 9.9 percent, so Hispanics aren't fully sharing in this economic success. What's more, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that in 2010 Texas tied with Mississippi for the highest percentage of workers earning at or below the minimum wage.

Perry opposes the Affordable Care Act and has pledged to repeal it if elected president. Ironic, considering the Texas Medical Association calls Texas the "uninsured capital of the United States." A full 60 percent of Latinos in the state lack health care.

Perry's education record is a disaster. In his last budget, he cut $4 billion from public school funding, even though Texas ranks 44th in per capita expenditures on students and 43rd in graduation rates. Still, Perry refused to raise taxes or tap the state's rainy day fund. Latinos comprise a majority of students in Texas public schools. By underfunding his state's school system, Perry is both limiting opportunities for Hispanics and negatively impacting the future of all Texans.

Perry is fond of mentioning that he appointed Texas' first Latina Secretary of State, and the first Latina to the Texas Supreme Court. That's the least he can do in a state that is nearly 40 percent Hispanic.

I find it disappointing that Perry has chosen to play to his conservative base. As the governor of a border state, he could've taken a leading role in advancing the stalled immigration debate and forged stronger ties with Hispanic Texans.

He may well regret that missed opportunity. Experts say Latinos may cast 8.7 percent of the country's ballots next year, making our votes increasingly pivotal.

This piece was cross-posted from OtherWords.org.

 

Follow Raul A. Reyes on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RaulAReyes

Texas Governor Rick Perry had a busy summer. In July, he told reporters he felt "called" to run for president. In August, he hosted "The Response," a prayer rally that drew thousands of people to a Ho...
Texas Governor Rick Perry had a busy summer. In July, he told reporters he felt "called" to run for president. In August, he hosted "The Response," a prayer rally that drew thousands of people to a Ho...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Christine Pritchett
Chris
11:11 AM on 10/16/2011
Reyes should be ashamed of himself "Perry a lousy amigo." i am writing this as of October 16th, after Perry has been hammered for wanting to give immigrants in state tuition. Latinos and others should be supporting Perry as a result of this, trying to give immigrants more than a fair shake.Instead, some are running him down. In state tuition is not free tuition, it is teh lower cost tuition one would get if one is the resident of a certain state. shame on some Latinos or any other immigrant who would run Perry down as he tries to help the very people who are blasting him.
11:14 PM on 09/19/2011
Hey alittle off topic but thought i'd join in not exactly Hispanics but have seen people come in this country documented or not pay their way into gov. subsidised apts. ahead of others already in line it runs everywhere. And now we should trust electives and praise price hikes, but on the bright side (do you need a light) minimum wage has gone up.
08:17 PM on 09/15/2011
Middle class...
06:22 PM on 09/15/2011
So Perry could be a better friend toward Latinos. To what extent do Latinos support Perry and Republicans in general?
04:25 PM on 09/15/2011
Bendito Reyes!!! Ese hombre es un asesino... ...no creo que tenga sentimientos positivos hacia los Latinos y Negros... solo cuando le conviene... Dios quiera que los repugblicanos del pais no lo elijan...Quien sabe, el hombre es tan atorrante que a lo mejor si convendria que sea el candidato para darle una gigantesca "pela" en los comi8cios!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aresponse2dotcom
Let truth prevail over "stuff"
10:46 PM on 09/14/2011
It would be interesting to find out what percentage of that so called 40% hispanic portion of texans are legal residents of our country. As far as insurance goes do the illegals even have insurance. Illegals do not contribute to the government and they are a drag on our nation.
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jsanti7
Sin's a Good Mans Brother I Know Both
09:46 PM on 09/14/2011
Texas doesn't want illegal immigration...quit hiring them and quit using the drugs the minority of them bring.
07:39 PM on 09/14/2011
Perry is a turncoat and a yahoo. If he gets elected, we're really doomed. Another Texas governor as president? Just what we DON'T need.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
06:30 PM on 09/14/2011
Rick Perry: making sure that TX stays part of the Third World.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ms schatzi
11:34 AM on 09/15/2011
By being easy on illegals.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DougDeWitt
progressive social-capitalist
05:40 PM on 09/14/2011
I guess I must be one of those moderate gueros. My personal Immigration Policy platform is as follows...

There are 11 million undocumented foreign nationals working in the US, with an average annual household income in excess of $45,000 as of 2007 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/story/2007/11/29/ST2007112900161.html. With zero deductions, such a household would owe approximately $5,000 in federal income tax. While there are no statistics on such a thing of which I am aware, it is apparent that many of Mexican origin send most of that income home, to where a wife and children remain. Virtually all employers of undocumented workers risk legal entanglements because there is no other option within select industries; without workers willing to work at what those industries can afford, those industries would either cease to exist, or bell peppers would cost $3 apiece at the local supermarket. Deporting one undocumented worker costs $23,148 http://news.jornal.us/article-4716.Mass-Deportation-Of-illegal-Immigrants-Cost-26-trillion-over-ten-years-Immigration-Reform-Solution.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DougDeWitt
progressive social-capitalist
05:53 PM on 09/14/2011
1. Every passport office in the US needs to open a new desk, at which work-visas are applied for, and distributed with a new SS# on the spot, to every currently undocumented foreign national who is working in the US. Employers of currently undocumented workers must take the responsibility to get them to the work-visa desk. Families of work-visa workers would be encouraged to join their worker here in the US.

2. Minimum wage laws must be amended to apply only to US citizens. Work-visa employees would be exempt, and employers permitted to continue to pay those workers exactly what they are now paying, without penalty. Employers would be responsible for withholding, permitting zero exemptions or dependents, another benefit of citizenship only. Employers must allow any US citizen who applies for a work-visa held position, to take that position on request, at equal pay.

3. The work-visa citizenship track would require filing 3-years consecutive tax returns, and a Level I English course, in addition to the citizenship course.

The results would be...

legitimate, legal status for 11-million foreign nationals, without fear of deportation;
$55 Billion in withholding taxes into the federal budget;
$254 Billion in savings, the cost of deporting 11-million undocumented workers;
$440 Billion in wages spent in the US, should all families emigrate as well.
07:34 PM on 09/15/2011
If you're talking about letting in people who are economically viable, then you might have something. Economically viable:

Student from Indian with MS in computer science currently employed at Microsoft or system.

Student from Taiwan, China or HK with an MS in engineering currently working at Boeing, Caterpillar or GM

No economically viable - illegal immigrant with 7.2 years education who needs health care, medicare, medicaid, social security, education for his children, etc.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fb0252
05:26 PM on 09/14/2011
Mr. Reyes is good attorney. He for enforcing law!!!!!
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tnkeating
Dyslexic agnostic insomniac
05:20 PM on 09/14/2011
Fact is Raul, Latinos are the second largest population in the state, they don't need gerrymandered districts in order to have fair representation. If you are against voter ID's having to be shown befor voting, you must support voter fraud. 60% of Latinos are uninsured? What percentage of those Latinos are illegal? I'd guess 30%, so in reality 30% get free medical anyway, the other 30% puts them in line with the rest of the uninsured. There is no stalled immigration debate Raul, the American people have spoken load and clear as to what should be done with the illegal alien problem.
Euphoria123
Are we there yet?
04:42 PM on 09/14/2011
This is all thst's importnat to you, isn't it? You don't care about anybody else in America, except "your own" and that's you Problem #1. The more you exlude yourself, the more you demand, the more you play pity politics the more America is going to be against you.

You fail to intigrate into our society and then blame us.
04:35 PM on 09/14/2011
My understanding is that Latino citizens make up substantially more than 8.7% of the voting age population of this country, yet the article states that they will only be 8.7% of the electorate. Obviously, so long as Latinos fail to register and vote according to their percentage of the population, they will be ignored by politicians in favor of people who do vote: older, wealthier, white people. So the first steps should be voter registration and get-out-the-vote efforts.
04:32 PM on 09/15/2011
Yessssss !!! !!! SI SE PUEDE....
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Otherday
Chief Imperial Sage, Earth, Milky Way Quadrant
04:09 PM on 09/14/2011
Perry appreciates illegal immigrants as a completely unregulated source of very cheap labor. The corporatist sponsors, those who shower Perry with "contributons," hold the same beliefs.