The Republican Party Is The Inclusive Party

Your party has sought vengeance for over six years and have hated the other side. Time for you to look in the mirror.
The Republican party is the party of fear, ignorance, racism, bigotry, and hate – a nativist anti-immigrant party, a party that seeks to disenfranchise voters of color, a party hostile to gay and transgender Americans.
 
The Republican party is the party of fear, ignorance, racism, bigotry, and hate . . . . .

Lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, lie, and LIE

In US politics, true evil has manifested itself as the Democrat Party. Democrats promote:

  • Groomers (teachers and others who push abnormal sexual lifestyles onto little kids)
  • Infanticide (abortion and late term abortion)
  • Marxism/Socialism
  • Child Genital Mutilation (many threads here on that already)
  • Stripping of Free Speech Rights
  • Stripping of Religious Rights
  • Stripping of Right to Bear Arms
  • CRT Hate and Racism
  • Election Theft
  • Open Borders
  • Destructive Monetary and Economic Policies
  • High Taxes
  • Massive Debt-Causing Spending

I could continue but those should be sufficient to horrify any good person who has even a minimal moral compass. Anyone who says that the Democrat Party does not support these things is an obvious liar. They are all provable beyond a shadow of a doubt.

The Democrat Party ultimately must be designated as a hate group and dissolved. Their involvement in slavery and the Civil War should have dissolved them long ago. The organization should be broken up and its' assets distributed to African Americans for reparations.
 
The Republican party is the party of fear, ignorance, racism, bigotry, and hate – a nativist anti-immigrant party, a party that seeks to disenfranchise voters of color, a party hostile to gay and transgender Americans.
Black voters put Bill Clinton, Barack Obama, and Joe Biden in the White House. This is the price we pay for letting the uneducated vote.
 
The Republican party is the party of fear, ignorance, racism, bigotry, and hate – a nativist anti-immigrant party, a party that seeks to disenfranchise voters of color, a party hostile to gay and transgender Americans.
The Democratic party is the party of fear, ignorance, racism, bigotry, and hate.
 
Let us go back to 2013, and one rare honest article by CNN, and remember that ever since then this trend has been growing, but the trend has since been ignored and lied about by fake news:

GOP’s surprising edge on diversity​


. . . . it might surprise you to hear that Republicans are by far the more diverse party when it comes to statewide elected officials such as senators and governors. On this front, they leave Democrats in the dust. And that’s why the GOP actually has a greater depth of diversity on their potential presidential bench looking to 2016 and beyond.

It’s counterintuitive but true. Numbers don’t lie. Let’s start with a look at the governors, the traditional launching pad of presidential ambitions.

Among the Republican ranks is Brian Sandoval, the Hispanic governor of Nevada. The 49-year-old former federal judge took on a corrupt conservative incumbent and is now racking up an impressive reform record in his first term. Likewise, there is New Mexico’s Gov. Susana Martinez, a former district attorney who remains popular in her state despite an otherwise Democratic tide.

How many Hispanic governors do the Democrats have in office? Zero.

Attracting minority voters a key GOP goal

America’s Indian-American population is fast-growing and successful. Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal is one of the nation’s most innovative governors, and the former Rhodes scholar is newly committed to making the GOP no longer “the party of stupid.”

If he chooses to run for president in 2016, Jindal could make a major dent in the race and possibly emerge toward the front of the pack. There is also South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, who climbed from the General Assembly to the Governor’s Mansion, breaking a number of historical barriers along the way. In the past two months, she has appointed the first African-American Republican from the South to the U.S. Senate since Reconstruction (Tim Scott), and her husband was deployed to Afghanistan.

How many Indian-American governors do Democrats have in office? None.

Now let’s move over the U.S. Senate.

The aforementioned Scott just was tapped by Haley to finish out Sen. Jim DeMint’s term, making the former congressman the first African-American Republican senator serving since Ed Brooke of Massachusetts in the 1970s. He is also the only black senator of either party.

Likewise, the GOP is looking at two young new Hispanic stars in the Senate chamber – Florida’s Marco Rubio and the newly elected Ted Cruz from Texas. Interestingly, both men are of Cuban descent.

Presidential buzz surrounded Rubio almost from the moment he entered office after defeating the sitting governor, Charlie Crist, in a contentious primary. He has put forward an innovative immigration reform proposal in recent weeks, which could help shape national debate, and he’s already decamped to Iowa to speak at a political dinner.

Cruz is a former member of the Harvard Law Review who donned the tea party mantle to defeat a powerful sitting lieutenant governor in a primary. He was born in Canada to an American mother, a fact that hasn’t stopped the fast-forward presidential projection. At the very least, Cruz will be a real force in the Senate for decades to come.

On the Democratic side, the only Hispanic senator is New Jersey’s Robert Menendez. While in line for the chairmanship of the Foreign Relations Committee, he has been beset by ethical allegations for much of his career, most recently the accusation that federal agents held off from arresting an office intern who was also an undocumented immigrant and registered sex offender until after Menendez’s re-election. (Menendez has said he didn’t know about any possible delay.)

Menendez might have influence, but he is not a charismatic figure. That’s why the Democratic National Convention chose to highlight San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro at its keynote, rather than anyone more senior or nationally known.

Bennett: At convention, GOP leaders reflect U.S. diversity

The Republicans’ surprising diversity edge when it comes to statewide elected officials cannot erase the very real diversity deficit they face below this level. In the House of Representatives, often called “The People’s House,” the disparity is stark
. . . . .

Well, how about that. All races share the GOP values of traditional family and faith. The woke Marxism of the Democrats will be their demise.


NEXT:
In 2020 we saw many people of color come into Congress as members of the GOP, including the first Mexican born woman. Mayra Flores of Texas became the first Mexican-born woman to be sworn in to Congress.
 

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