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Romney's campaign has said it is aiming for 38 percent. On Tuesday, Villaraigosa estimated Democrats would get about 70 percent of Latino voters. There is no shortage of ideas on why Romney is struggling. In an open letter to the GOP published last week, Univision news anchor Jorge Ramos told Republicans they will lose the Hispanic vote in November and "might be condemned to lose the White House for many decades" due to positions such as Romney's opposition to legalization for undocumented immigrants and his push for self-deportation, an idea that people who are in the country illegally might leave the U.S. on their own if life is made difficult enough for them. Ramos, who broadcasts in Spanish and is one of the most watched anchors in the United States and across Latin America, said Republicans have squandered commonalities with Hispanics, such as opposition to big government and abortion, and instead made themselves enemies of immigrants. It's a sentiment shared by Guy Sideboard, who was born in Puerto Rico and moved to Tampa as a boy. "As a Latino, I believe in hard work," said Sideboard, a bilingual information technician. "But there are many Latinos who don't have many opportunities, and I don't think Romney can relate to them at all."
[Associated
Press;
Suzanne Gamboa reported from Washington.
Follow Peter Prengaman at http://twitter.com/peterprengaman and Suzanne Gamboa at http://twitter.com/APsgamboa.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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