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Utah's GOP Reaches Out to
Latinos
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Tuesday,
January 15, 2002 |
BY GREG BURTON THE
SALT LAKE TRIBUNE From: http://www.sltrib.com/2002/jan/01152002/utah/167638.htm
Looking to expand their political capital beyond the stereotypical white,
male establishment, Republican leaders in Utah said Monday they have
embraced the "revitalization" of a state chapter of the Republican
National Hispanic Assembly. The caucus, essentially
dormant for the past few years, is generating renewed interest in Utah
because of the Republican Party's stand on family values, gun rights and
patriotism, said Utah Republican Party Chairman Joe Cannon. "These people
have a natural inclination to the Republican Party."
During a news conference Monday inside the state
Capitol, the GOP's top brass also unveiled a Spanish-language version of
the state party Web site, www.utgop.org, and a recruitment campaign,
coordinated by the assembly, that they described as "the most aggressive
campaign in the history of Utah to recruit Hispanics into the Republican
Party." "It's important for us to be more active in
our Hispanic communities," said Senate President Al Mansell, R-Sandy. "We
need to reach out to others and bring them in" to the Republican fold.
The GOP's Hispanic Assembly has established new
headquarters at 117 E. South Temple in Salt Lake City, and appointed a
chairman, Marco Diaz, a 31-year-old American Express executive who moved
from Peru to Utah at age 17 to study at Brigham Young University.
Diaz outlined three goals for the assembly:
Recruit grass-roots activists from the state's
201,559 Latinos. Involve viable Latino candidates
in the political process, especially through appointments and elections.
Advise GOP leaders as the "eyes and ears" of the
Latino community. "We can have a huge impact on the
Republican Party," Diaz said. Latinos are a natural
fit for the GOP because of a shared pro-life, pro-family agenda, he said.
But, Diaz said, it will be a challenge to recruit
Latinos committed to bedrock Democratic causes such as affirmative action
and civil rights, issues that have helped make Utah's Hispanic Caucus an
influential faction within the state's Democratic Party.
Diaz, a lifelong Republican, praised the education
initiatives of U.S. Rep. Chris Cannon and U.S. Sen. Orrin Hatch and
exhibited no fear of challenging the sacred cows of some Utah
conservatives. Even though Utah's House GOP caucus
crushed all attempts to rewrite Utah's hate crimes law during the 2001
Legislature, Diaz said he "supports the principle" of perfecting the law.
While noting the need to secure the state's
airports, he said a recent roundup of workers at Salt Lake City
International Airport, mostly Latinos who had used forged documents for
job applications, "could have been done a little differently."
And, Diaz he said he disagrees with Utah's English
Only law, an initiative supported by many conservative Republicans.
Praising the Hispanic Assembly's reformation, Utah
Attorney General Mark Shurtleff, in Spanish, said, "Your vote is your
voice."
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