And this more than any other reason (and there are others) is why I believe the Republican Party is in deep trouble.
Why? Because currently conservatives have very little voice in minority communities. McCain lost the Latino vote roughly 70-30. McCain lost the black vote roughly 95-5.
It seems pretty obvious to me that unless the GOP finds a voice with these groups it will quickly become irrelevant. The GOP will no longer be able to win elections simply by winning the majority of the white vote.
One of the first and most obvious steps to take in talking with these groups is to make sure the people talking to them aren't almost exclusively white. The GOP needs not only new blood, but it needs fresh faces who bring a little diversity to the party.
I know, I know, conservatives don't view the world through the lens of race. We view diversity as something that undermines democracy and excellence. In general that's true, but in this case, conservatism needs to "embrace change".
Consider these comments the other day from Rush Limbaugh:
This whole business of class politics, it gets confusing. You know, it makes me just want to abandon all this class politics. I hate identity politics and I hate class politics, because we are all Americans. I don't like, "We gotta go out and get the Hispanics, though, Rush." There's a way to get Hispanics. We can get African-Americans. We can get women. We can get everybody with a set of core principles that we do not abandon that benefit everybody regardless the damned color of their skin or their gender! We're all Americans, for crying out loud. And now we got people on our side who want to get into class politics and identity politics and come up with a portion of our agenda that targets this group (say it's Hispanics) or this group (say it's the working poor) or gotta go get this group: one-armed amputees on West 14th Street in The Village. I mean, however they want to get this down pat, we gotta go do it. Wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong, wrong. Broad pricniples that apply across the board: conservatism, liberty, capitalism, free markets, property rights, national security.Before I analyze this quote, I want to make it clear that I am not a Rush Limbaugh hater. Rush has been and continues to be a strong leader in the conservative movement.
In general, I think Rush in right. Conservative principles are powerful and compelling. I believe, as he does, that these principles speak to the lives of all Americans regardless of color or class. But there is one problem. There is one area in which I diverge from his opinion.
Hispanics, African-Americans, and many other ethnic groups (on the whole - there are obviously exceptions) aren't interested in hearing conservative principles from Rush Limbaugh. They aren't open to embracing conservative principles as articulated by Sean Hannity. It's just not going to happen.
The conservative columnist Tony Blankley touches on this in the article "Forging a Conservative Agenda" which he wrote immediately following the election.
Blankley essentially argues that the GOP should return to principled conservatism, but then should also fight for these principles among all people groups.But, as a national cause championed by a national party, a conservative agenda must learn to speak persuasively to a near majority of Hispanic Americans, or we will be merely a debating society. When Texas joins states such as Colorado, New Mexico (and even North Carolina, Virginia, Arizona, Florida and many others) where Hispanic votes are necessary for victory, there is no possibility of national governance without finding that voice.
Our challenge is not to retreat to the comfort of self-congratulatory exile, but to sweat and bleed - and be victorious in the arena of public opinion.
Speaking to other ethnic groups doesn't mean conservatives have to open up their pocket book and promise huge government entitlement programs. But it does mean an investment of time, relationship, and a modeling of what this looks like.
The Republican Party has some very strong leaders who also reflect the growing diversity that is America (there I go again using the evil d- word).
Sarah Palin - Bobby Jindal - Michael Steele (and there are others of course). These are the names of some current strong leaders who can assist in the process of expanding the conservative base.