Fernando C. deBaca has resigned his post as Chairman of the Republican Party of Bernalillo County. I want to state from the outset that his comments which prompted his departure were absolutely wrong, divisive and in fact historically incorrect. I want to get that point out of the way early in this article because I know those of you who are not particularly “my fans’ will be presuming that I did not disagree with his comments. However, I did and I still do. I also want to say that Fernando C. deBaca has proven by stepping down that he has more integrity, courage and loyalty than any of the Democrats who couldn’t wait to get their pictures and comments in the media.
I am confident not a single Republican, at any level, in New Mexico, or nationally, agrees with Fernando. And Republicans led the way in doing the right thing regarding those remarks. From Senator Domenici to Darren White, from Allen Weh to Pat Rogers, all stepped up to say that those remarks were wrong and that Fernando should step down. But what about the Democrats in New Mexico? Once again, they re-emphasize, unwittingly to be sure, how consistently bad they have been—and continue to be—when it comes to dealing with race in our country.
Why would Brian Colon, Ben Lujan and Sheryl Williams Stapleton all get out front talking about Fernando C. deBaca, while failing to say a single thing about an elected member of their own party who has made equally offensive comments about Barack Obama? I don’t know the answer to that either. But here is last month’s widely published article about New Mexico State Senator Mary Jane Garcia:
“Mary Jane Garcia, a New Mexico state senator and pledged Clinton delegate, cried as Clinton conceded. She first met Hillary Clinton in 1992 and speaks of her like a sister who has been wronged. ‘It hurt me deeply,’ she said of Clinton’s loss. ‘I’m really struggling. I’m going to Denver to cast my vote only for Hillary and no one else. She’s good. She’s kind. She’s compassionate.’
Garcia, 71, lives in Doña Ana, just north of Las Cruces. She thinks Obama has come off as condescending and arrogant.
“I don’t know one single Hispanic over 50 who will cast a vote for Obama,” she
said, conceding that “there have always been conflicts between blacks and
browns.”
–Katie Kerwin McCrimmon, Rocky Mountain News, August 4, 2008
Now why does Mary Jane Garcia, who by the way is the sitting Democrat Whip in the New Mexico State Senate, get a pass on her comment, while Fernando C. deBaca is sent packing as a county chairman? What would possess the Chairman of the Democrat Party, the Speaker of the New Mexico House of Representatives and the Majority Whip of the New Mexico House of Representatives to say anything about C. deBaca while allowing Mary Jane Garcia to get away with her comments? How come nobody is calling for her to resign with the same strength and vigor they did for C. deBaca?
I am sure some of you are going to say we didn’t know about her comments. And I have to concede that that in and of itself raises a question about the media coverage. Whether it had taken place in Las Cruces, or had first been reported in the Rocky Mountain News would not have mattered if Garcia had been a Republican. This story would have been picked up and it would have run on the front page of New Mexico newspapers for several days had it been a Republican making these statements. There is no question about that.
But my question today is to the Democrats who called on Fernando C. deBaca to resign. Are you going to be consistent and ask for the same thing from Democrats who make these same kinds of statements? Or once again are you going to sweep it under the rug—like you do Robert Byrd’s history with the Ku Klux Klan? Are you going to stand up and show that you actually care more about people than you do your party? Are you going to once again follow the lead of Republicans and do what is right when it comes to civil rights and dealing with race?
Although your party came kicking and screaming so to speak, after 120 years of opposing civil rights, it did finally join Republicans in doing the right thing. The first Civil Rights Act they supported was finally in 1964. And I give them credit for that. But now Democrats need to do what is right, follow the Republicans lead, and stand up to a member of your own party. Democrats need to condemn the racist comments of Mary Jane Garcia, and do so with the same energy you did to Fernando C. de Baca. This is your chance to do what is right. Unlike before, you don’t have to wait a century to do the right thing. You can do it now.



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