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Dear GOP: Cubans not Mexican

Touting Rubio as go-to Latino sends the wrong message to Mexican-Americans

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Due to an act of Congress, Cuban nationals who arrive in the U.S. after 1959 cannot be illegal immigrants. They’re automatically refugees. It’s amnesty!

The federal government has spent billions to assist those who’ve fled Castro’s regime. It was a Cold War policy, signed by President Johnson. If they can get to our shores (many have died in the process), they have an instant pathway to citizenship. They just have to get here. And since 1995, have what is referred to as “dry feet.”

I say this to Republicans who seem to be aspiring now to win the Latino vote: Cubans are not Mexicans. So when the party touts Florida Senator Marco Rubio as their go-to Latino — Politico called Rubio “the fresh-faced ambassador to conservatives” (It’s since been scrubbed) — they’re not wooing the 31 million Latinos who identify themselves as Mexican-American, the biggest Latino group and therefore biggest Latino voting bloc in the U.S.

Cubans may speak Spanish, and be from someplace else, but their immigration experience is unique to the island they come from ... and our policy toward said island.

And Puerto Ricans, the second largest Latino group in the country, are also not “illegals.” They’re Americans. The island is a U.S. territory. I’m just trying to help you out, Republicans.

The point is: Putting Marco Rubio out on immigration reform is cynical conservative tokenism (ala Sarah Palin, Herman Cain and Nikki Haley), but it also proves the hypothesis by Mexican-Americans: Republicans don’t actually care about them. One clue is that they assume they’re pretty much Cubans.

Immigration reform’s focus (and sticking point) is what to do about the estimated 11 million people who live here without documentation. A 2005 Pew Hispanic Center report says 56 percent of them are from Mexico, 22 percent from other Latin American countries (mainly Central America), 13 percent are Asian, 6 percent Canadian and European, and 3 percent African. (None are Cuban.)

These 11 million people — nearly 80 percent of whom are Latino and using what Newt Gingrich called “the language of the ghetto” — make up our underground economy and exploited underclass.

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