Mia Love Becomes First Black Republican Congresswoman
For at least half a century, the party of Lincoln has battled charges that it is racist, sexist and anti-immigrant.
Today, voters from a conservative state made those arguments a little bit harder to make. In Utah, Mia Love became the first black Republican woman — and first Haitian American — elected to Congress.
For the GOP — a house divided that faces significant demographic hurdles to winning the White House in 2016 even as it celebrates President Obama's shellacking — this was huge. A party threatened with electoral extinction among African Americans and immigrants now has someone to brag about in Washington. In a wave election less about fresh Republican ideas than fervid disapproval of all things presidential, Love's compelling personal story is an oasis. She's not just a black face in what's often described as a party full of angry old white men. She's a path forward.
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Aunt Thomasina!
Nice! Don't know much about her politics, but she's pretty and has a cool name. Congratulations, Mia!
Mia Love you long time.
I for one am waiting to see which party elects the first senator with a facial tattoo.
It will happen when old people have body piercings and listen to rap music.
So... Twenty or thirty years from now.
We can't wait that long. End discrimination now!
Deep down, in the heart of my bottom, I really hope the people who play identity politics suffer for a few extra days in purgatory.