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May 30, 2002, 8:45
a.m. PanderCare Where does good politics
stops and pandering begin?
By Raul
Damas |
Earlier this month the RNC launched a Spanish-language television
news show titled Abriendo Caminos (Expanding Pathways), a
move that is coextensive with the Republican party's ongoing effort to
include Hispanic voters in their communications.
Right
on schedule, charges of "pandering" have emanated from the Left and, more
significantly, the Right.
If the
Republican party is to remain a viable political force, knee-jerk
accusations of pandering should be summarily dismissed, especially
when they come from Republicans.
Pandering is defined as "catering to the lower tastes and desires
of others."
Why does a television program, which showcases
Republican ideas and achievements, become demeaning once it is translated
into Spanish?
Is the
very use of the language insulting? Certainly not to Spanish-speaking
Hispanic voters.
Apparently Republicans are now doing liberal Democrats' job for
them: Expressing an "aggrieved groups'" outrage before the group has a
chance to do it themselves, if they care to do it at all.
When
DNC Chairman Terry McAuliffe can sit back and enjoy the sound of
Republicans parroting his own talking points, things are not going
well.
From
the start of his successful presidential campaign, George W. Bush has held
that Hispanics, the fastest-growing segment of the U.S. population, share
enough ideological ground with Republicans to be an important part of the
party's future. In office, President Bush has worked hard to communicate
with Hispanics all over the country.
A
recent New Democrat Network poll found that in a mock ballot President
Bush has pulled even with Al Gore among Hispanics. However, that same poll
found that "Republicans" share nowhere near the same approval ratings as
"Democrats." Clearly, Hispanics are responding to Bush's inclusiveness,
but they haven't heard enough from the rest of the party. Until
now.
With
the launch of Spanish-language "GOP TV," the party is signaling a desire
to follow the president's lead and share in his successes.
This
turn of events has Democrats extremely worried, so watch for cries of
"Republican pandering" to go hand in hand with offensive displays of
real Democratic pandering.
For
example, Terry McAuliffe often refers to Republicans' perceived lack of
focus on "Hispanic issues" like "education, health care, jobs and
immigration."
Two
things immediately come to mind: 1) Haven't President Bush and the
Republicans in Congress brought about landmark education reforms, enacted
a massive job-creating tax cut, passed several economic stimulus packages,
introduced the most innovative healthcare solutions in recent memory, and
also passed the pro-family, pro-immigrant 245i bill? 2) "Hispanic issues"
sound a lot like regular "issues."
The
real issue, however, is that Democrats see Hispanics, if not all
minorities, as "other." For them, there are American concerns and then
there are "Hispanic concerns" or "black concerns." Theirs is a political
ideology based not on uniting Americans through shared beliefs and goals,
but in dividing and classifying Americans into pliable
subgroups.
For
Democrats, "Hispanic concerns" are uniformly about low expectations, in
other words, pandering.
Witness
how, when election reform was considered in the Senate, Democrats claimed
Hispanics would be especially hurt by the requirement of showing a photo
ID when voting for the first time.
In
Democrats' minds, presenting a photo ID, a requirement for everyday tasks
like buying cigarettes, boarding a plane or driving a car, is beyond
Hispanics' reach. This is the type of political and social infantilization
Democrats do so often, and Hispanics can do without.
Similarly, in the debate over Social Security privatization,
Democrats claim that Hispanics do not possess the financial wherewithal to
effectively administer their own retirement accounts.
Somehow, though, Hispanics were able to do so in their countries of
origin, like Mexico, El Salvador, Peru, Columbia, and Chile, where their
privatization plans serve as the model for our own.
In
Democrats' eyes, Republicans commit the crime of treating Hispanics like
regular Americans, which means expecting the same things from them as they
would any other American.
Running
political ads on Spanish-language television is not pandering, but simply
a case of recognizing that there are different kinds of people in this
country who get their information from different sources.
President Bush using high-school Spanish during a national radio
address on education is not pandering. Tom Daschle speaking in English
about the inability of Hispanics to meet the same requirements as all
other Americans is.
"Pandering" is not an action; it's a motive. That's a fact — in any
language.
— Raul Damas is director of operations at Opiniones
Latinas, a bilingual polling firm. |