Posted on 04/10/2015 12:52:13 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
WASHINGTON Ted Cruz has a Latino name. He has a Latino background. And hes one of the few Latinos to have ever run for the presidential nomination of a major party.
But is he Latino enough?
The Hispanic community in his home state of Texas gave him some but not overwhelming support when he was elected to the Senate in 2012. And mostly Democratic Latinos nationwide are more wary than ever after Cruzs relentless criticism of immigration reform and the new health care law.
His father is a Cuban exile, and the Republican senator from Texas touts his father fleeing Cuba during the revolution every chance he gets, which usually gets a rousing response from an anti-Castro audience.
In his presidential announcement speech March 23, Cruz spoke of his fathers journey, an immigrants journey.
Imagine for a second the hope that was in his heart as he rode that ferry boat across to Key West, and got on a Greyhound bus to head to Austin, Texas, to begin working, washing dishes, making 50 cents an hour, coming to the one land on Earth that has welcomed so many millions, he said. When my dad came to America in 1957, he could not have imagined what lay in store for him.
The Cruz campaign released a video in Spanish and promises a push for Latino voters. We will have an aggressive Hispanic outreach effort and have staff that are spearheading it, said Cruz campaign spokeswoman Catherine Frazier. Teds father, Rafael, will also be an active surrogate.
(CRUZ-SPANISH-AD-VIDEO-AT-LINK)
But Cruz, whose mother is Anglo, has had a limited connection to the Latino community, which is largely Mexican-American and also largely Democratic.
Running in the primary, Ted Cruz is not making any effort to appeal to Latino voters, said Matt Barreto, co-founder of the research and polling firm Latino Decisions.
Cruzs attacks on issues favored by much of the Hispanic community, especially the Obama administrations easing of immigration restrictions and the Affordable Care Act, have made him unpopular. In a Latino Decisions poll in November of over 4,000 Latinos in 10 states where Hispanics are a significant voting bloc, Cruz had a favorable rating of 31 percent and was viewed unfavorably by 39 percent.
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who also is Cuban American and who is announcing his presidential campaign Monday in Miami, also had a 31 percent favorable rating but fared slightly better with a lower negative rating of 36 percent.
Cruzs birth certificate gives his name as Rafael Edward (Ted is a nickname), named after his father. The elder Cruz left Cuba on a student visa after having been arrested and tortured for his disenchantment with rebel leader Fidel Castro, who he had initially supported. His last name is very distinctive: cruz means cross in Spanish.
Ted Cruz was born in 1970 in Calgary, Alberta, where his parents were in the oil business. The family moved from Canada to Houston when he was small.
Cruz speaks passable Spanish; he has said he speaks Spanglish.
Hes slightly more Hispanic than Jeb Bush, said Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University, who added that he was only half-kidding.
A recent report that former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who is weighing a presidential run, had checked off Hispanic on a voter registration card caused a stir. Bush is considered a blue blood, the son and brother of former presidents from Texas whose family roots are from wealthy New England families. But Bush, who laughed off the incident as a mistake, speaks fluent Spanish and is married to a woman from Mexico.
Texas does not ask for race identification on voter registration, so Cruzs self-identification is not so readily available.
While Cruz is ethnically Hispanic on his fathers side, that is not part of his political persona, said Jillson.
The Texas senator won his seat in his first political campaign in 2012 by appealing to the tea party in the state with his message of being a strong social and fiscal conservative.
He garnered 35 percent of the Latino vote in the general election, according to a poll by Latino Decisions, outperforming GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney, who got 29 percent.
But, said Barreto, who is also a professor of political science at UCLA, Cruzs working against the immigration bill crafted by Rubio and a bipartisan group of senators in 2013 cost him support.
He himself comes from an immigrant family, and that creates bad feelings in the Latino community, said Barreto. The bill, which set a path to citizenship, passed the Senate but was not considered by the House of Representatives.
Ted Cruz is undeniably Latino, said James Henson, director of the Texas Political Project at the University of Texas at Austin. Does he seem to be interested in appealing to the Mexican American majority of the Latino population? Not so much. His career in Texas primarily has been focused on reaching out to conservatives.
Obama is what, 1/4-1/2 black, yet he’s considered fully black. In reality, he’s bi-racial.
I call BS.
Does he speak fluent spanish?
I didn’t realize we were considering hiring him to make tacos.
I thought it was interesting that his real name is Rafael - but otherwise most of the article is totally off base since it assumes legal hispanics (you know, the ones that can actually vote) want illegal hispanics here taking their jobs.
That is the most racist thing I have ever read.
Scratch a Liberal and you find a racist underneath.
Their thinking is that all White People have a wide range of Cultures and Attitudes.
But All Black (and/or Hispanics and others) People, Think and Act, EXACTLY alike.
>:(
Is zer0 black enough? Is George Zimmerman white enough?
These questions and more to be answered by the race baiters
Is Hillary female enough?
I do not care if he is hispanic or was latino.
My only question is does he consider himself an
American, does he support the Constitution?
Yeah. The writer is a disgusting piece of leftist excrement.
No, just some Spanglish.
Although I’m betting our next First Lady could throw together some good ones.
Is good enough for me.
Um... We care about that?
I like him because he’s conservative and well spoken. I’ve read his platform/positions and could more easily vote for him than anyone I’ve voted for since Reagan.
His Race has zero to do with that.
A very long article that does nothing to illuminate the content of his character. We have raised a generation of professional whining book cover judges.
True that.
Without the Arugula, Tofu, Hummus or Preaching.
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