I talked to Ruben Gallego. Democrats should listen to him. - Rubin WaPo
In a bleak election cycle for Democrats, Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Arizona) defeated Kari Lake in the Arizona Senate race, outpacing Vice President Kamala Harris by roughly four points and by nine points among Latino men. Democrats, naturally, want to know how he did it. For starters, Gallego has an extraordinary biography. Raised in a poor neighborhood by a single mother, he worked his way through school, became the first in his family to go to college (Harvard), then enlisted in the Marines and deployed to Iraq in a unit that suffered some of the wars worst losses.
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Critically, Gallego grasped that voters, including many Latino men, felt like they were drowning because of inflation. He told me, They felt betrayed. They felt that they let their family down. Facing this as an emotional and not just an economic issue, Gallego recognized the need to give people permission to not blame themselves. When cutting an ad on rising prices, he improvised a line speaking to this sentiment Its not your fault.
Gallego did not shy away from border security. As a progressive with a no-nonsense attitude about the border, he pushed the administration to plan for the end of covid-driven immigration restrictions known as Title 42. After last summers executive order to tighten border restrictions, Gallego said it was a step in the right direction, but also emphasized the need to hire more Border Patrol agents, fix our broken asylum system and keep our communities safe.
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Gallego warns Democrats not to treat Latinos as a monolith. Not all immigrants are the same. Not all the people that cross the border have the same experience, and even within those communities they dont all think about them themselves the same way, he said. An undocumented immigrant working here for decades does not see his situation as the same as that of a recent border crosser, even if its someone from the same country.
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Above all, Gallego talked to and listened to voters where they were at rodeos, boxing matches and Mexican restaurants. He knew he had to reach voters who never follow political news. He told me that for just $400, he went to a minor league soccer match and handed out Gallego jerseys letting fans spread his name. He advises Democrats to do such events consistently; its not enough to do one event to check a box.
https://wapo.st/3VQOIRn
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displacedvermoter
(3,199 posts)Last edited Sat Dec 21, 2024, 11:33 AM - Edit history (1)
decades does not see his situation as the same as a recent border crosser"!!!
I got mine, in other words. More words of wisdom.
eppur_se_muova
(37,635 posts)Unfortunately, no one seems to be addressing that adequately.
displacedvermoter
(3,199 posts)show that new waves of immigrants are taken advantage of and oppressed by the previous wave of immigrants. The new folks are different, are perceived as a threat to jobs, and are easy targets.
My own French Canadian ancestors were scorned and abused by the Irish, who themselves had been scorned and abused by Scottish and German immigrants. And today I fear, descendants of those same French Canadians are among the most virulent bashers of the black and brown folks arriving today.
Baitball Blogger
(48,395 posts)It's really not a Democratic objective to spend resources on undocumented immigrants for the sole purpose of getting votes, right? Because they don't vote.
But we are supporting them based on humanitarian and economic reasons, right?
With luck, once they become naturalized, the hope is that they'll vote Democratic, but there is never a guarantee.
Mostly, I don't think many of these newly Americanized immigrants, and I mean all of them, truly understand how politics works in this country. It's almost impossible to rewire the brains of those who suffered from socialist regimes to understand that when Republicans say they're anti-socialism, they mean they want to do away with social security and medicare. I've given up on the Democratic Party in getting that message across.