Wednesday, September 19, 2007

"GOP Leaders" Urge Candidates to Attend Forums Sponsored by Minorities

From The Washington Post:
Key Republican leaders are encouraging the party's presidential candidates to rethink their decision to skip presidential debates focusing on issues important to minorities, fearing a backlash that could further erode the party's standing with black and Latino voters.

The leading contenders for the Republican nomination have indicated they will not attend the "All American Presidential Forum" organized by black talk show host Tavis Smiley, scheduled for Sept. 27 at Morgan State University in Baltimore and airing on PBS. Former New York mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, former senator Fred D. Thompson (Tenn.) and Sen. John McCain (Ariz.) all cited scheduling conflicts in forgoing the debate. The top Democratic contenders attended a similar event in June at Howard University.

"We sound like we don't want immigration; we sound like we don't want black people to vote for us," said former congressman Jack Kemp (N.Y.), who was the GOP vice presidential nominee in 1996. "What are we going to do -- meet in a country club in the suburbs one day? If we're going to be competitive with people of color, we've got to ask them for their vote."

Making matters worse, some Republicans believe, is that the decision to bypass the Morgan State forum comes after all top GOP candidates save McCain declined invitations this month to a debate on Univision, the most-watched Hispanic television network in the United States. The event was eventually postponed.

"For Republicans to consistently refuse to engage in front of an African American or Latino audience is an enormous error," said former House speaker Newt Gingrich (Ga.), who has not yet ruled out a White House run himself. "I hope they will reverse their decision and change their schedules. I see no excuse -- this thing has been planned for months, these candidates have known about it for months. It's just fundamentally wrong. Any of them who give you that scheduling-conflict answer are disingenuous. That's baloney."

Former Republican National Committee chairman Ken Mehlman urged candidates to "reconsider this opportunity to lay out their vision and other opportunities in the future."

"Every one of these candidates I've talked to is sincerely committed to offering real choices to African American and Hispanic voters, and in my opinion have records that will appeal to many of these voters," he added.


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My Comments:
While I agree that the Republican candidates should be seeking out opportunities to take their message to those who have not traditionally been Republican voters, apparently, these "GOP leaders" are not too concerned about the decision of the "frontrunners" to skip the "values voters" forum.

I guess the "big tent" is supposed to include everybody EXCEPT the party's social conservative base.

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2 Comments:

At 9/19/2007 11:09 AM, Blogger Brian said...

This is nothing more than an attempt to demonstrate to the “black” community that republicans don’t want them in their tent, and Kemp took it hook line and sinker. Republicans are our own worst enemy.

" we have found the enemy and it is us."

 
At 9/19/2007 10:34 PM, Blogger Sir Galen of Bristol said...

I think Brian is right that the only group who'll do more damage to the GOP than Democrats is Republicans.

The party leadership and the "frontrunners" have done such a good job marginalizing us values voters, that many of us will stay home, and the rest will be split up among six or eight "values" candidates.

How I wish we could somehow settle on a single conservative standard-bearer.

 

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