Hi, I'm Mitt's Son, I Speak Spanish, But Don't Ask Me Any Hard Questions

With Romney in hiding, at least partially, CBS4 made the right move in covering his son, who, did I mention, speaks Spanish! But I'd like to hear Romney tell us, in plain English, what he thinks about comprehensive immigration reform.
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Craig Romney son of Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)
Craig Romney son of Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney addresses the Republican National Convention in Tampa, Fla., on Thursday, Aug. 30, 2012. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

Mitt Romney's son, Craig Romney, was in town Tuesday to meet "with some Latino leaders in the Republican Party, talking about Hispanic support and small business," as reported by CBS4.

Romney has a "daunting task," Channel 4 told us, to "pick up votes from the Hispanic community which, in most polls, is vastly in favor of President Obama."

You wonder whether Craig Romney is up for the job, because, even though he speaks Spanish, he "admits he's not much of a policy expert."

"The youngest Romney says it's his job to hear from voters and take their concerns back to his father," Jeff Todd reported for Channel 4.

Channel 4 should have asked Craig Romney why his ability to speak Spanish qualifies him to be his father's "kind-of ambassador," even though he has little policy expertise.

And it does make you wonder about the criteria his father would use in appointing real ambassadors, if Romney is elected prez.

But, anyway, Channel 4 did the right thing journalistically and reported the thoughts of someone in the crowd, effectively bypassing the messenger pigeon and finding someone to articulate a concern directly to papa Romney.

"We talked to a Latino community member at today's event, and he said he has been contacted by the Romney camp to try to drum up support, but he said what he wants to hear first is true solutions from the candidate about real issues, like true comprehensive immigration reform."

You can't blame this guy for wanting to hear directly from the candidate, since the Spanish-speaking ambassador doesn't know policy.

Media outlets can fill the void by questioning Romney on immigration next time he swings by Colorado.

Meanwhile, to answer the gentleman who spoke to CBS4, the most impartial observer could not call Romney's immigration position "comprehensive."

Nicely summarized here, it's rooted in border enforcement, opposition to the Dream Act, and in a concept known as "self deportation," which Romney has described as:

Romney: "The answer is self-deportation, which is people decide they can do better by going home because they can't find work here because they don't have legal documentation to allow them to work here."

One Spanish-language outlet in town, KBNO radio, has been trying to get an interview with Romney, during which comprehensive immigration reform would certainly be discussed.

But unlike Obama, who was interviewed by KBNO's Fernando Sergio, Romney has yet to appear on the show, despite Colorado GOP chair Ryan Call's pledge to do his best to land him for Sergio.

With Romney in hiding, at least partially, CBS4 made the right move in covering his son, who, did I mention, speaks Spanish!

But I'd like to hear Romney tell Hispanics and the rest of us, in plain English, what he thinks about comprehensive immigration reform.

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