By endorsing Mitt Romney former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, hermanito of disgraced ex-President George W. Bush, upends perhaps the last political career in America still brimming with Republican credibility with Latino voters.
Candidate Romney's characteristically oafish policy position on the illegal immigration crisis insults the self-evident truth "that all men are created equal." As national political pollsters and the nation of political professionals they conduct harmonize on Romney's Republican nomination for president of United States, note that Pres. Romney promises to be a catastrophe for stateside Latino affairs.
Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach consults Mitt Romney as an unpaid adviser. "To Kobach," POLITICO reports, "a Romney administration would mean the implementation of the Arizona and Alabama principles nationwide, which he says might spur the self-deportation of half of the country's estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants by the end of Romney's first term."
"I have articulated those ideas -- I expressed many of these views to the candidate," Kobach said when asked whether Romney had signed off on that policy. "I don't want to speak for him, but yes, I think his support of attrition through enforcement speaks for itself."
The Republican Party's "Arizona and Alabama principles" with regards to Latino affairs are the same "principles" that scorned our wise Latina Supreme Court Justice nominee and stooped to terminology like "Anchor Babies". They are the same anti-Latino and anti-immigrant principles that now endorse Mick Romney as their candidate.
By endorsing a President Romney, Jeb Bush endorses an policy of immigrant doom targeted at the Latino community.
Note: Latino Voices would't publish this.