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2012 Elections

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On his gazillionth appearance on the Sunday talk shows, Sen. John McCain was asked about whether the increased number of Hispanic voters might spell trouble for Republicans in the 2012 elections and McCain admitted that all of that immigrant bashing might not end up working out so well for them in states like Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and eventually Texas.

Okay, maybe it wasn't his gazillionth appearance, but it sure feels like it. Heaven forbid we can't let another Sunday go by without making sure we hear from the de facto Commander in Chief as ordained by our media that lost the last presidential election.

McCain believes the Republicans need a more "humane" approach to the issue of immigration, but really didn't back off of the same rhetoric we've been hearing used to fearmonger over the issue even during this interview. I think the GOP is going to continue to use immigration as a wedge issue to divide the electorate until they're voted out of office en masse for it. McCain sees the writing is on the wall as he admits here, but the Republican Party has been running on the politics of fear and racial tensions for decades now. And even if they start to soften their stance on the immigration issue when it comes to the Hispanic community, they'll just find another boogeyman to take their place. They've got a long alternate list already.

Transcript via CNN.

CROWLEY: Let me ask you about your home state of Arizona, which Democrats, you may or may not know, are beginning to eye as maybe doable for President Obama simply because you have an increased number of Hispanics who are registering...

MCCAIN: Absolutely.

CROWLEY: ... a big drive to get them out, and because, by and large, that's a community that looks at the Republican Party as anti- immigrant.

Do you worry about the image, the imagery of the Republican Party as it relates to some of the issues that are going on up on the Hill right now? And I want to talk to you about the payroll tax.

But does the Republican Party need to refigure its imaging?

MCCAIN: I think that the Republican Party has to discuss this issue in as humane a way as possible. By the way, I would remind you that...

CROWLEY: Yes, but Newt Gingrich tried to do that and everyone jumped all over him.

MCCAIN: Yes, that's, you know, I still maintain that position.

But, look, also, the enthusiasm on the part of Hispanics for President Obama is dramatically less than it was in 2008 because he has not fulfilled his campaign promises, either.

So I view the Hispanic vote up for grabs. And I think that we are going to have to discuss this issue in a humane fashion. I still believe that most Hispanics agree that we need to secure the borders, if for the drug issue alone. We talk about people coming across the border, I'll tell you, Candy, the coyotes mistreat these people in a terrible fashion. The drug cartels, who are moving drugs across our border, that are killing our Americans by polluting our society with drugs. And we have an obligation to secure our borders.

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Ah yes... all that's old is new again. Republicans never get tired of demonizing welfare recipients and the poor, do they? While discussing what the strategy for the House Republicans should be in order for them to gain more power leading up to the 2012 election on Fox’s Journal Editorial Report, The Wall Street Journal’s John Fund has this suggestion for them.

FUND: Here’s another idea. The stimulus bill killed most of the welfare reforms that Bill Clinton signed into law in 1996. I think those were very popular. They were also very successful. The Republicans can vote out a restoration of those welfare reform rules and dare the Senate to turn them down because I think that would be a great polarizing issue.

It looks like the Wall Street Journal and some right wing think tanks have been beating this drum for some time now as you can see from these articles:

Stimulus Bill Abolishes Welfare Reform and Adds New Welfare Spending

The Return of Welfare As We Knew It

And there are hundreds more articles out there just like those two from right wing blogs and think tanks. I believe this is the section of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 that they are complaining about. It would be nice to have some analysis on this from some place besides the right wing think tanks and The Wall Street Journal, but I've yet to find any, although I did find one from Truthout on how many of the states were not even taking advantage of the funds --States Ignoring Stimulus Welfare Fund