Washington Post: “Republicans are becoming more diverse. That’s a great thing”
In his Washington Post column yesterday, Henry Olsen highlighted how women and diverse candidates combined for two thirds of the seats Republicans flipped in New Jersey and Virginia earlier this month. The success these candidates had in 2021 embodies the mission of the Right Leaders Network initiative, the Republican State Leadership Committee’s effort to grow the future of the Republican Party by recruiting, training, and supporting more diverse candidates for state office.
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Opinion: Republicans are becoming more diverse. That’s a great thing.
Washington Post
November 17, 2021
Political observers have spent considerable energy discussing the many legislative seats that Republicans flipped in the Virginia and New Jersey elections this month. But few have remarked that women and minorities led the charge, continuing the recent trend toward a more diverse GOP.
Women or racial minorities won 10 of the 15 state legislative seats Republicans captured from Democrats in November. The winning candidates run the gamut of life experiences. New Jersey’s Marilyn Pipierno, a fitness coach who won a seat in New Jersey’s 11th Assembly district, is typical of the new crowd. She and fellow Republican Kimberly Eulner beat two Democratic incumbents in a suburban Monmouth County seat that President Biden had carried by nearly 12 points just the year before. In all, seven of those 10 victors flipped seats that Biden had carried by at least seven points.
A.C. Cordoza is perhaps the most interesting new Republican. Cordoza, who is Black, was a Democrat who backed President Barack Obama’s campaign only to find his “core values” aligned more with Republicans. As vice chair of the Republican Party in Hampton, Va., Cordoza ran on a typical GOP platform, but with a twist: He does not have a four-year college degree, and he pledged to work to improve options for “career and technical education in our public schools.” He challenged incumbent Democrat Martha Mugler, a longtime fixture in local politics, and defeated her even though she spent more than 12 times as much.
This development continues a trend that started last year. In 2020, every congressional seat that flipped from blue to red was captured by a woman or a minority. Republican women and minorities won open primaries in safely red congressional seats, too.
Nor is this progress limited to Congress. Three Republican governors are women, and Republican women hold significant leadership positions in 21 states.
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The fact is that there has never been a better time to be a woman or minority Republican than today. Primary voters don’t care about a candidate’s gender, race or ethnicity, as Virginia Republicans demonstrated this year by nominating a Black woman for lieutenant governor and a Latino man for state attorney general. So long as a candidate largely shares the party’s mix of conservative and populist beliefs, that person is in the hunt.
It’s long been fashionable to denigrate the GOP as the party of old, White men. The demographic is still overrepresented among party officeholders, but that’s fast changing. It won’t take many more elections for the party to look much more like America — and likely get a lot more Americans’ votes as a result.
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