Political Hotsheet
By

Brian Montopoli /

CBS News/ April 23, 2012, 9:41 AM

Can Mitt Romney fix his Latino problem?

Republicans vow to reverse birth control policy

Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla.

/ AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite
News Analysis

In a closed-door conversation with top donors that was overheard by a pair of reporters last week, Mitt Romney was blunt: If Republicans can't win over Hispanic voters, it "spells doom for us."

The numbers back that up: Recent polls show President Obama leading Romney among Latinos by more than 40 points. It's an edge that could well mean the difference in Colorado, Nevada, Virginia, Florida and even Arizona - and one that threatens to prevent Romney from keeping Mr. Obama from a second term.

Obama adviser David Axelrod sought to press the advantage Sunday, blaming the lack of comprehensive immigration reform during Mr. Obama's first term on Republican senators who have been dragged to the right by the Tea Party.

Like many of those senators, Romney finds himself in a bind on immigration: He needs to appeal to the largely older, white voters in the GOP base for whom border security is a top issue, but he also needs to keep from alienating the large and growing Latino vote in a way that keeps Latinos squarely in the Democratic fold. (As of the 2010 census, Latinos made up more than 16 percent of the population.) In an apparent effort to put to rest concerns about his moderate record as Massachusetts governor, Romney tacked farther to the right on immigration than he probably would have liked to during the GOP primary. Romney said he would have vetoed the DREAM Act offering children brought to the United States illegally a pathway to citizenship, came out strong against in-state tuition for illegal immigrants and said Arizona's controversial immigration law could be a model for the nation.

It would be a mistake to assume Latino voters only care about immigration - in a recent Pew Hispanic Center poll, just one third of Latinos called immigration an extremely important issue, far fewer than cited jobs and the economy - but there's little question that Romney's hard-line stance, which has been spotlighted on influential Spanish-language television network Univision, hasn't done him any favors with the group.

Romney spent Friday in Arizona, where he met with Hispanic business owners, and he travels today to Pennsylvania to campaign with a huge potential asset: Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. Rubio is widely discussed as a potential vice presidential pick for Romney because he has Tea Party support, he can potentially deliver Florida and, perhaps most importantly, he could send a message to Latinos that they should give Romney and the GOP a second look. (Though Rubio is Cuban-American, unlike the majority of Latinos in the United States, raising the question of whether his potential appeal to Latinos is overstated.)

Rubio has proposed a modified version of the DREAM Act that, without going as far as the Democratic version, would offer nonimmigrant visas to qualified young illegal immigrants that would allow them to eventually apply for citizenship. But while the Romney campaign has already started shifting back to the center on some immigration issues now that the nomination is essentially locked up, Romney has been noncommittal on Rubio's proposal - perhaps out of fear that embracing it will anger a vocal Republican base that sees any path to citizenship as an unacceptable rewarding of illegal behavior. (Romney did reportedly did say his party should offer up a "Republican DREAM Act" during that closed-door fundraiser, but he isn't saying that publicly.)

Even if Romney wants to embrace Rubio's proposal, the untested Florida senator is a gamble as a vice presidential pick who might be seen as less desirable than a safer (and more boring) choice like Rob Portman or Tim Pawlenty. Which is part of the reason that ultimately, Romney may simply have to hope that Latino voters cast ballots in November based on economic issues, not immigration policy. But no matter how things play out in this election, the GOP's Latino image problem isn't going away. And Republicans fear that if they don't change the dynamic soon, the damage could extend far beyond the 2012 election.

© 2012 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.
49 Comments Add a Comment
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robert1129 says:
Romney is on record as being anti Hispanic. If anyone thinks that he can now change the record, that is wrong. If Cesar Chavez was alive and ran as Romney's VP mate, Romney would still go down in defeat.

In order to win the nomination, Romney "sold" his political soul to the far right wing of his party which backs cruel practices in anti immigration which deeply offend Hispanics. Further neither Romney nor his five healthy young sons have ever served a day in uniform and they never will.
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occupy_cbs says:
TimeToEvolve: "The Latinos are the least of this clueless plastic parasite's problem. He does not have a plan of any kind."



While I wouldn't say that Hispanics are the least of vulture capitalist willard's problems, it's all minorities that see the republican party as a group of elitists supporting only the top 1%.

Then on top of that, the gender gap is killing willard and the GOP, as they continue their hard-fought WAR on women across America!

Then, last but hardly least, is that willard is just promoting MORE OF THE SAME failed GOP policies like the bush/cheney PNAC NEOCON WARmongering, more very failed "supply side economic insanity," and his favorite -- vulture capitalism in order to offshore more jobs!
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occupy_cbs replies:
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It's not that willard "has no plan," it's just that Americans have seen his re-run movie before, and it gave us the bush/cheney Great Recession of 2007-09, and he and the GOP just wants to take us backwards for more suffering for the 99% while the top 1% thrives!
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T-Prop says:
Etch-A-Sketch can fix anything with money.
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Galactus909 says:
What do Hispanics care about? The same things that everyone else cares about. The economy, jobs, a better future for our families. Only liberals and Democrats care about illegal immigration. They want to try pandering to the Hispanics. They want to encourage criminal activity instead of following the law.
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TimeToEvolve says:
The Latinos are the least of this clueless plastic parasite's problem. He does not have a plan of any kind. Someone help me out.
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TimeToEvolve says:
He also better fix his problem with women. And also with the poor and American workers. He had better cut out his constant championing of policies to increase the wealth of those that don't need it. Oh, too late, Robmee IS one of those people.
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TimeToEvolve replies:
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You miss the point you were trying to make. It's about fair share. It's whether greed and your own success trumps the country that provided it all.
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TimeToEvolve says:
Smitty you actually believe the propaganda (I mean polls). Only an idiot or an angry white man would vote for Robmee. He appeals to those people because Mitler is an arrogant, macho, racist parasite. And I guess that appeals to older white men.
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smittyc says:
Something wrong with the whole article. Romney was leading Obama last Rasmussen poll. That is the second time he has taken the lead. The race will be on the economy, Obama fooled the electorate with his hope and change campaign in 08, the working class has had a rough four years with unemployment and foreclosures which Obama promised he would fix as soon as elected. Obama sounded like he had a plan in 08, it turned out to be empty promises. I don't see a close election and I don't see Obama as president.
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TimeToEvolve replies:
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You forgot that Obama had to get us out of the last Republicon administration mess. And now you want another one with Robmee?
smittyc replies:
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Sorry, didn't mean to upset you with facts. Have a nice day.
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TimeToEvolve says:
The only group that Robmee appeals to is over 50 year old white men. This fits in with the general Republicon platform against women, poor, minorities, gays and American workers.

These are the same clueless group of people that I called AWMS (angry white males) who supported the scams of the Iraq and Afghanistan invasions and occupation.
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O_ReallyFactor says:
New headline and story: "Can Obama fix his Caucasian problem?"
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TimeToEvolve replies:
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As long as you don't count the southern inbreds.
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