Login

Register | Forgot Your Password? | Close
Republican strategist Karl Rove speaks at a luncheon at the California Republican Party convention, in Sacramento, Calif., Saturday, March 2, 2013. Rove told California Republicans to "get off the mat", and to find candidates to reflect the party's diversity. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) - GOP strategist Karl Rove said Saturday that rebuilding the Republican brand in California will be a tough task that will require them to diversify and create a strategy to spread their message to a wider audience.

Referring to the state party's deep losses in recent years, Rove said it needs to focus on larger themes of restoring jobs and reducing government spending.

He also said the party must recruit candidates who reflect the diversity of the country, and in particular, California. By next year, Hispanics will overtake whites as the state's largest demographic group.

"We need to be asking for votes in the most powerful way possible, which is to have people asking for the vote who are comfortable and look like and sound like the people that we're asking for the vote from," Rove said.

His message to delegates, activists and local party officials throughout California was in line with the philosophy behind his new political action committee, the Conservative Victory Project. The committee was established to support Republican candidates it deems electable, offsetting GOP candidates who might offend key parts of the electorate.

Rove told activists at the Republican Party's spring convention in Sacramento that rebuilding would be "a big task," but noted Texas as an example. Once a Democratic stronghold, the state elected Republicans to 95 of 150 state House seats in November. Democrats have not won a statewide office in Texas since 1994.

Republicans hold the opposite status in California, where Democrats won supermajorities in the Legislature last fall and hold every statewide office. The GOP accounts for less than 30 percent of the state's voters and has been losing favor with Latinos, women and younger voters.

Rove said rebuilding the California Republican Party might be so tough that party activists might choose to continue on their current path, "or you can get up off of the mat and throw yourself back into this contest."

"Think smart, be active, be committed, rebuild the organization, ask for the vote in the right way, and speak boldly and proudly about our universal principles in a way that attracts support of your fellow Californians," he said.

Rove appeared at the convention as a favor to former state Senate Minority Leader Jim Brulte, a longtime friend who was expected to be elected as the state party's new chairman on Sunday.

His suggestions on expanding the types of candidates being fielded struck a chord with Tyson Greaves, a 63-year-old party member from San Jose who said pushing for diversity within the party is crucial.

"It's pretty clear to me that you don't have authenticity or credibility in a community if you show up only in an election cycle," he said.


(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

share this story:
facebook

5 Comments   |   Join the conversation »
  • Add A Comment 
  • Abuse
    UZI wrote...
    Race/Ethnicity/Gender/etc is not important!
    What is important is the individuals Constitutional backbone. Treating someone justly and appropriately isn't subjective to race or any other superficial attribute. Qualifying someone based on these widens the divisions and solidifies the hostilities.
  • Abuse
    2cents wrote...
    The Left has . . .
    wooed and divided the minority groups of this nation as a key strategy for many years, while Conservatives strived to unite citizens by restoring national . . . and thus individual wellbeing, regardless of heritage. One strategy is about demolition and segregating. The other is about building and unifying. One condescends to, indoctrinates and controls minority groups. The other presumes intellectual capacity among all. Rove apparently recognizes that damage control is necessary among those hardest hit with Leftist doctrine, and blinders are beginning to fall
  • Abuse
    Michoacan wrote...
    Republicans, still licking their
    grievous, self inflicted wounds, reassess and see their way forward blocked by their own previously expressed contempt for the concerns of America's burgeoning minority populations. They also see that their aged, dwindling, conservative base offers no lifeline for resuscitation, but must be coddled if for no other reason than to get past the primaries. What to do? Continue the slide, or grow up? Canny Rove has a survivor's do-what-it-takes instincts. Other conservatives prefer to go down with the ship.
  • Abuse
    Steve wrote...
    I guess that means putting aside
    principle and ethics to pander to a group, by throw entitlements at them and ignoring important fedeal laws.
  • Abuse
    Mazate wrote...
    Conservatism
    Conservatism is a political ideology. It's not a race. If you want Hispanics to join the Republican party just because a candidate is the same race as them, then does that really make them conservative? We have enough RINOs in the party as it is and they're slowly destroying it. (Rove is one of them.) We don't need to resort to the race card to get people into the party. I would rather be the minority party with people who are principled and stick to their guns than the majority who are lukewarm on conservatism.
  • 1