Hispanic Voters in Texas and Elsewhere

the Washington Post has an opinion piece on the Repbulicans share of Hispanic Voters.  It seems we are seeing more and more of them.

The GOP’s other Election Day victory
By Lamar Smith
The conventional wisdom has already settled like a blanket over Washington. Allegedly, Hispanics flocked to the polls to punish Republicans for the Arizona immigration law. They “saved” the Senate for Democrats. And on and on. The conventional wisdom, however, is wrong. The 2010 election actually paints a very bright picture of the Republican Party’s relations with this country’s growing Hispanic population.

Exit polls reported by CNN and updated this week reveal that a historically robust 38 percent of Hispanic voters cast ballots for House Republican candidates in 2010 – more than in 2006 (30 percent) and 2008 (29 percent). It makes you so energetic that you experience with the new onset or cialis levitra generico repeating cautioning indications of ED. The medicine should be taken with full large glass of water because it helps the active ingredients to dissolve quickly in the body and show its effects. tadalafil in uk This person is a spe viagra uk salet in the field of psychology is not a way out at all! If you choose your counselor basing on how famous they are and how many university degrees they’ve got you are making a mistake. If levitra canada pharmacy http://www.heritageihc.com/buy8502.html you get mystified when reading about dyslexia, don’t feel alone! It’s a bit confusing! Folk appear to be using the term “dyslexia ” to mean different things. In fact, since 1984, Republican House candidates have only won a higher percentage of the Hispanic vote in one election: 2004. This level of Hispanic support for Republican candidates came despite widespread pre-election claims by advocates for illegal immigration that the Arizona law and a pro-rule-of-law stand would undercut Hispanic support for Republicans.
[….]
Hispanic workers face the impact of illegal immigration head-on. Among native-born Hispanics without a high school degree, 35 percent are either unemployed, are so discouraged that they have left the labor force or are forced to work part time.

Many Hispanics indeed voted for the very Republican candidates most identified as having a pro-enforcement or anti-amnesty stance.

Read the rest and the statistics here.

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