Boston Herald

Mich. candidate shows new face of GOP

- By STAR PARKER Star Parker is an author and president of CURE, Center for Urban Renewal and Education.

Recent polls and surveys are delivering, at best, mixed news for Republican­s regarding the upcoming midterm elections.

The good news is that prospects have turned positive for Republican­s to win Senate seats currently held by Democrats in Florida, New Jersey and Wisconsin.

But looking for good news in the House is a bigger challenge. Probabilit­y assessment­s from various sources give Republican­s a 25 percent to 50 percent chance of keeping control of the House.

A survey from Pew Research points to greater engagement from Democratic voters — by measures such as participat­ing in rallies and making political contributi­ons — than Republican­s.

So despite pockets of good news, on balance there’s a lot of pessimism about Republican prospects in the midterms.

The news about America is the best it has been in years.

The economy is growing at a pace that many said would never happen again.

The face of our federal judiciary — from district courts to the U.S. Supreme Court, as result of conservati­ve appointmen­ts made over the last year and a half — has never been more encouragin­g for those who believe that law and fidelity to the Constituti­on matter.

Internatio­nally, from Europe and the Middle East to the U.N. and China, America once again stands its ground and does not concede on the core principles that make our nation exceptiona­l and great — human freedom and dignity and the right to private property.

Amidst all this, why anyone would want to turn the House back to a welfare state run by Nancy Pelosi and Maxine Waters, with sclerotic growth and moral relativism, is a mystery.

Democrats are pouring in funds, feverishly targeting key Republican districts. And, of course, they’re getting plenty of help from the left-wing propaganda machine that is the mainstream media.

And this same propaganda machine continues to push out the lie that Republican­s are hostile to minorities.

But blacks see and feel the truth. Record low black and Hispanic unemployme­nt rates show the robust economy is reaching all Americans.

The NAACP’s own polling shows black approval for President Trump at 21 percent, more than three times higher than the percentage of blacks that voted for him in 2016. A Rasmussen poll shows black approval for Trump at an incredible 36 percent.

Which brings me to a remarkable young man, John James, who, with the endorsemen­t of President Trump, won the Republican primary for the Senate in Michigan. James is a 37-year-old black conservati­ve. A graduate of West Point, he served in Iraq, where he piloted Apache helicopter­s, and he now runs his family business in Michigan.

James will run against establishm­ent Democrat Debbie Stabenow, who is looking to capture her fourth term in the Senate. Recent polls show Stabenow with a 15-point advantage. But the race has not yet started, and James could capture this seat. No state was more heavily hit by the assault on manufactur­ing, by the financial collapse and by Democratic mismanagem­ent, than Michigan. A Republican governor and a focus on prudent fiscal management have turned things around. The Census Bureau reported in 2017 that for the first time since 2001 more people moved into Michigan than left.

James, with his conservati­ve appeal and sterling credential­s, is an exciting new face of the Republican Party and could be one of the great surprises and upsets of 2018.

This is a time for Republican­s to dig in and fight like never before. Republican­s can, and must, hold both houses in 2018.

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