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Howard(Dean)for Hispanics (Schadenfraude Alert)
The Monitor ^ | August 06,2005 | Marc B. Geller

Posted on 08/06/2005 5:21:16 AM PDT by Liberty Valance

EDINBURG TEXAS — The national leader of the Democratic Party denied Friday that Republicans are winning over traditionally Democratic black and Hispanic voters, and he pledged that his party will no longer take its supporters for granted.

Howard Dean, chairman of the Democratic National Committee since February, addressed more than 300 people, including students and elected officials, during a visit to the University of Texas-Pan American. Edinburg was the latest stop on a national tour Dean is making as part of a 50-state strategy to strengthen state Democratic parties.

The former candidate for the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination rallied local Democrats with a pledge that the national party will not turn its back on labor, women, blacks and Hispanics.

He said the party leadership has learned from its mistakes and is committed to standing up for what Democrats believe.

"We do need to organize," he said during Hidalgo County’s first visit by a sitting DNC chairman. "We need to invest in all 50 states. We need to reach out and ask everybody for their vote. We need you to run for office, all you folks out there, particularly you young people."

Greeted by signs that included "Viva Dean," "Dean Rocks" and "Bienvenido Howard Dean," the former Vermont governor joined local Democrats in a chant of "Sí, se puede," or "Yes, it can be done," the United Farm Workers motto labor leader César Chávez first popularized.

"South Texas has been so good to the Democratic Party. I think it’s about time that we were good to South Texas," Dean said. "You cannot expect to get people’s votes unless you ask. We’re here to ask for your help and your support."

David Guerrero, 18, is a recent McAllen Memorial High School graduate who is considering studying political science when he starts college at the University of Texas-San Antonio.

He believes Hispanics are underrepresented and said he may answer Dean’s call to run for office.

"It’s just so refreshing that someone who thinks like me is running the Democratic Party," he said. "I don’t like what the (Republican) senators from Texas are doing. They’ve got their priorities all wrong. I don’t like where the country is headed. We should be focusing more on domestic issues instead of the war in Iraq."

Guerrero said he plans to join the Young Democrats of America at UTSA and get involved in fund raising and voter registration.

He thinks more young people would get involved in politics if party organizers concentrated more of their outreach efforts on school campuses.

U.S. Rep. Ruben Hinojosa, D-Mercedes, said the national Democratic leadership has realized the potential of South Texas only in the last 10 years.

"When they have invested in education – in both the K-12 and the college-level education programs — they have seen that our young men and women have been able to surface to positions of leadership like myself," he said.

Dean acknowledged some of the past failures of the Democratic Party, which gave up nearly 10 percent of the Hispanic vote to President Bush.

"We are not perfect. We have made mistakes in the past, and we will make mistakes in the future, but we are proud and we will fight back. One of the biggest mistakes that we’ve made is not to stand up for who we are. We are not Republicans. We don’t want to be Republicans. We think most people who are Republicans don’t really want to be Republicans."

State Rep. Aaron Peña, D-Edinburg, said the attention Hispanics are receiving from the Democratic leadership is welcome but overdue.

"Many of us within the party have been arguing vehemently that Hispanics were being lost to the Republican ranks, that if we didn’t do something fast, you were going to see a sizable number of the Hispanic population jump over to the Republican ranks. Finally we have a chairman who’s listening to the message."

In an interview before the rally, however, Dean downplayed the successes of the GOP in wooing traditionally Democratic voters, pointing to President Bush’s recent nomination of Judge John Roberts for the U.S. Supreme Court justice.

"I don’t actually think that the GOP has been making very strong inroads in the black community and in the Hispanic community. They talk a good game, but then they appoint Judge Roberts, who appears to be against voting rights. Then they scapegoat Hispanics by talking about inviting the Minutemen into California or having (U.S. Rep.) Tom Tancredo talk about shipping everybody back across the border."

During the rally, Dean received some of his most rousing applause by capitalizing on local opposition to the Minuteman Project and accusing the GOP of fear mongering. He warned Democrats here that immigrants will replace homosexuals as the Republican Party’s whipping boy.

The Fort-Worth Star Telegram reported last month that the state Democratic Party, which has been shut out in statewide elections since 1994 and remains in the minority in both houses of the Legislature, is nearly out of money and struggling to meet its payroll.

Plans include deploying four paid organizers to each state, including Texas, which received little attention from Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry during the 2004 election cycle.

"We’re not going to give up on Texas anymore," Dean said. "Texas will be Democratic once again, and the Hispanic population of Texas will likely lead that renaissance of the Democratic Party."

But the man who screamed his way into regular rotation of America’s late-night show opening monologues acknowledges the reform of his party won’t happen overnight.

"It is like turning an aircraft carrier," he said. "But it is turning."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government; Mexico; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: chairmandean; dnc; hispanicvote
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To: martin_fierro
the state Democratic Party. . . is nearly out of money and struggling to meet its payroll.

This is the third state where the Dem. Party seems to be in serious finanical shape. Florida, Ohio (I think), and now Texas. I know the Dems in Georgia are hurting financially. I wonder what other state Dem. Parties are also struggling to make payroll.

This would be an interesting item for the MSM to report on, which will never happen.

21 posted on 08/06/2005 8:47:50 AM PDT by Atlantian
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To: BurFred
I for one am not opposed to a guest worker program or allowing Mexicans to come here(Legally!) and provide a better life for themselves and their families.
Wouldn't it be better to pressure Mexico to "provide a better life for themselves and their families"?

I would also support a grandfathered visa program to allow those who are here to stay and be documented.
Would you also support, via increased taxes, their abuelos y abuelas on Social Security, widowed-with-children tia Maria on SSI and crippled primo Jose on Medicaid - all courtesy of "Family Reunification"? Be careful what you ask for.

Now flame Away!!LOL!
You've lit my Bic. ;-)

22 posted on 08/06/2005 12:16:50 PM PDT by Oatka (Hyphenated-Americans have hyphenated-loyalties -- Victor Davis Hanson)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]


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