Tan Nguyen is running for the U.S. House in California’s 47th Congressional District. He is running as a Republican in opposition to the incumbent, Democrat Loretta Sanchez.

The novice Republican apparently made a mistake by sending a letter, or causing his campaign to send a letter, to Hispanics warning that those in America illegally or immigrants could be jailed or deported for voting.

Go here: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061019/ap_ ... ing_threat

Nguyen’s letter would have been perfectly fine had it mentioned only illegal aliens. Unfortunately, the letter lumped illegal aliens and immigrants together and appeared to warn Hispanics of the severe consequences of “voting while Brown.”

Mind you, Nguyen is justified in being very concerned about votes being cast by illegal aliens. In 1996, former Congressman Bob Dornan lost his seat to Loretta Sanchez by just 984 votes. Dornan alleged that his loss was due to votes cast by Hispanic illegal aliens.

Nguyen has paid a heavy price for his ill-begotten campaign letter. The FBI raided his headquarters and California Republican leaders asked him to abandon his campaign. Both Governor Arnold Schwarzennegger and challenger Phil Angelides denounced the letter as a “hate crime.”

All in all, not a good campaign strategery for the immigrant from Viet Nam as it turns out.


However, one does not need to go back too far in history to find an equally bone-headed mistake involving Hispanics and voting in California. In fact, just this past summer, Democrat candidate Francine Busby advised an audience of Spanish speakers that “You don't need papers for voting, you don't need to be a registered voter to help.”

Go here: http://www.soundpolitics.com/archives/006284.html

While Busby’s remarks got wide media attention, the FBI was not called in and Democrat leadership did not desert the Mensa-adverse Busby. The mainstream media did not go into integrity shock.

All in all, the liberal reaction was guarded hypocrisy.


Why the difference, one wonders, between the treatment afforded Nguyen and Busby?

The answer, of course, is that one is a Republican and the other is a Democrat. One is running against a Hispanic, the other was running against an evil Caucasian and, even worse, a Republican.

All of which proves that courting the Hispanic vote in California can be very hazardous—and that all crime is not equal!