No More Boring White Guys for the GOP

By Jonah Goldberg width=71width=73A friend of mine a Hispanic entrepreneur asked me a question some time ago. He said When is the last time you saw a Hispanic panhandler? I think its a great question. Ill tell you in my life I never once have seen a Hispanic panhandler because in our community it would be viewed as shameful to be out on the street begging. That was Republican U.S. Senate candidate Ted Cruz of Texas on Fox News Sunday. He went on to make the case that Latinos are culturally conservative and economically entrepreneurial.  Just for the record Ive seen a Latino panhandler or two. Or at least I think they were Latino -- I dont usually quiz panhandlers about their ethnic backgrounds. But Cruz is right that there do seem to be fewer Latino beggars than other ethnicities (though in my experience Asian-Americans are the biggest shirkers when it comes to creating an ethnically diverse lumpenproletariat) and I think Cruzs pride in this fact is refreshing -- and helpful. Ive been saying for a while now that this is the last presidential election in American history where the GOP will benefit from having a boring white guy as the presidential nominee. This is not a point about racial animosity toward Barack Obama perhaps the most exaggerated issue of the last four years. The key as it relates to 2012 is not the white part of that formulation its the boring part. The operatic nature of Obamas campaign in 2008 and his inability to live up to the expectations he set for himself have created a market for bland Mr. Fixit types. But going forward the GOP needs to figure out a way to become more appealing to new constituencies particularly younger voters and Latinos. Boring white guys arent great for that project. But candidates like Ted Cruz are. Its hardly a novel insight that the GOP needs to deal with Americas changing demographics. Inside the Beltway the conventional explanation for how Republicans should do that tends to boil down to pandering and capitulation. For instance Hispanics care about immigration were told therefore Republicans should adopt the same policies as the Democrats. The substance of those policies aside there are political problems with this thinking. First Republicans rarely if ever win such bidding wars. Second theres a faulty assumption here: that various ethnicities and young people generally are both monolithic and hardwired to support certain policies and are therefore immune to persuasion. But young people almost by definition believe in things they eventually grow out of. The same goes for Latino voters who are not monolithic in almost any sense: racially ethnically religiously or ideologically. For instance contrary to much of what youve heard in the press the Latino vote in the United States has been growing less Democratic over the last 30 years according to Sean Trende the senior elections analyst for RealClearPolitics.com. Moreover illegal immigration is nowhere near as important an issue for Latinos (as opposed to Latino activists) as the press makes it seem. In 2008 less than half (46 percent) of Latino voters who voted Democratic told exist pollsters that the issue was either very or extremely important to them. And nearly a third of Latinos who considered illegal immigration very or extremely important voted Republican. Trende argues that most of the Democratic advantage among Latinos can be explained by income. Poor people tend to vote Democratic. There are a lot of poor Latinos in the U.S. Still if you control for income the Latino voter becomes less distinct from the average voter. In short Latinos lean decidedly Democratic but they are decidedly persuadable as well. And young politicians like Cruz -- and Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida also of Cuban descent -- have a better shot at persuading them. White Republican politicians tend to be terrified of racial and ethnic activists and the journalists who empower them. This results in many GOP pols sounding condescending pandering or dull when they try to reach out to minorities. Young energetic whip-smart and philosophically coherent politicians like Cruz and Rubio can confidently appeal to Latinos without sounding condescending and without caving to liberal assumptions about how to win over Latinos. Theyre also harder to demonize. I mean just imagine if Romney had mused about the nations dearth of Hispanic panhandlers. Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Onlineand the author of the forthcoming book The Tyranny of Clichs. You can reach him via Twitter @JonahNRO. 
by is licensed under
ad-image
image
11.21.2024

TEXAS INSIDER ON YOUTUBE

ad-image
image
11.21.2024
image
11.20.2024
ad-image