MODERATOR: The next question is for Governor Romney. The same thing: Why has the Hispanic support for Republicans declined?
 ROMNEY: You know, I think Republicans went to Washington with the expectations of the whole world that we would change Washington.
 And in many respects, as has been said by many people, Washington changed Republicans. And when Republicans act like Democrats, America
 loses.
 Republicans spent too much money, and we let down our ethical standards. And so, Hispanics, along with other people in this
 country, want to see change. I (inaudible) the Republican Party can connect with Hispanic
 voters, like other Americans, because there are some peculiar connections between our party and the Hispanic people.
 One, Hispanic Americans serve in the military and care about our military. We salute them for their service right now. And we'll
 strengthen the military. If I'm president, I'm going to add at least 100,000 troops to our military.
 Secondly, Hispanic Americans are entrepreneurs and business people. And I know how to build our economy. I'm going to keep our
 taxes down and make sure that our economy grows and thrives.
 ROMNEY: And, third, Hispanic Americans are family-oriented and people of faith. I'm going to strengthen America's families. And so
 my platform, this Republican platform, connects with Spanish -- Hispanic Americans from across the country.
 (APPLAUSE)
 MODERATOR: Governor Romney, (inaudible) to be here and (inaudible). Do you think that you're taking a risk to come here to
 lose support from the more conservative base in your party?
 ROMNEY: I don't think so at all. I think Americans across the country of all ethnicities recognize that we are a great, pluralistic society. That statue you have on the screen behind us, that light that shine out for the entire world said, "This is an unusual land. This is a land that welcomes people of all backgrounds, of all ethnicities, of all nations; welcomes them here to this great land." 
 (APPLAUSE)
 And she said that God gave to the individual certain inalienable rights. And that changed the relationship between the state and the citizen.
 It said that the citizen was the sovereign and the state was not. And that changed the entire world. People came here for opportunity.
 And our party is a party of opportunity. We stand for strength in our home. We stand for strength in our economy. We stand for strength in our military, so we defend our values, and so of course Republicans are going to come and speak to Hispanic Americans in the language they understand best, so we can get their votes and they can understand that we are the party of strength and the party of freedom. 
 ROMNEY: Thank you.
 MODERATOR: Governor Romney, the question is: Why not legalize some undocumented aliens if they comply with the requirements, if they meet certain requirements?
 ROMNEY: You know, I have the occasion to talk to people who have loved ones that are hoping to come to this country, to be reunited with family members. And they're staying in their home countries applying legally. I believe that those people ought to be the first 
 ones to get to come to this country. Those who have come illegally,
 in my view, should be given the opportunity to get in line with
 everybody else, but there should be no special pathway for those that
 have come here illegally to jump ahead of the line or to be come
 permanent residents or citizens. They should be treated like
 everybody else who wants to come to this country.
 ROMNEY: I think we ought to secure our border, we ought to have
 an employment verification system to know who's here legally and
 illegally, and recognize that legal immigration is an extraordinary
 source of great capability and vitality for our country. We welcome
 the cultures that come here, the education, the work ethic, the family
 values. We're going to protect legal immigration. At the same time,
 we're going to enforce the law, show that we're a nation of laws, and
 welcome the people who have been standing in line first.
 Thank you.
 (APPLAUSE)
 Governor Romney, some days ago you fired a company that used to
 take care of your landscaping because supposedly they were hiring
 undocumented workers.
 The question is this, did you report, officially, that the people
 or the company to immigration authorities? And do you think that
 should others report undocumented aliens, the people that you suspect
 are undocumented?
 ROMNEY: You know, we're a very compassionate people. We're also
 a people who follow the law. And the landscaper at my home is an old
 friend, and when he made a mistake the first time, I told him in no
 uncertain terms, you have to make sure that anybody that works on my
 property and walks on my property is a legal individual.
 And he did his best, but he made a mistake. And apparently, two
 people he had there were not legal. And I told him that's it, and we
 terminated that relationship. And I think everybody in the country
 understands who those folks are. It became a big news story.
 But let's underscore something here, which is that employers like
 this landscape company, and he's Hispanic American, he doesn't have a
 way to determine whether the people he's hiring are legal or illegal.
 Isn't it amazing in this country, with the fact that American Express
 or Visa or Mastercard can tell you that fast whether the card is
 authorized or not.
 We don't know who's here legally or not. That's why we need an
 employment verification system to identify the fact that legal aliens
 that come here are legal, are entitled to work. And that's something
 I'm going to get done so our employers know who's here legally and we
 welcome people who want to come work in this country.
 Thank you.
 (APPLAUSE)
 MODERATOR: Governor Romney, we would like to know -- see what
 your opinion -- what's going to happen to the children who are being
 separated from their families?
 ROMNEY: We're going to finally have a system that welcomes
 people here legally, and that says that those that have come here
 illegally are invited to get in line with everybody else.
 And the Constitution, as Senator Thompson has indicated,
 indicates that those that are born here do become United States
 citizens by virtue of being born here.
 But if they're born here from parents who come across the border
 illegally and bring them here illegally, in my view, we should not
 adopt, then, these chain migration policies that say, you've got a
 child here that's a U.S. citizen, and the whole family can come in.
 ROMNEY: That, in my opinion, is a mistake.
 We are a nation of laws. And you're correctly going through each
 part of immigration policy here. But let's underscore this one more
 time: We are, in this audience, almost every person here, an
 individual who came to this country because it's a land of opportunity
 and liberty.
 We also, because we have laws, can have opportunity and liberty.
 We're going to enforce the laws. Welcoming people here -- we're not
 going to cut off immigration; we're going to keep immigration alive
 and thriving.
 But we're going to end the practice of illegal immigration. It's
 not inhumane. It's humanitarian. It's compassionate. We're going to
 end illegal immigration to protect legal immigration.
 MODERATOR: Thank you.
 ROMNEY: Thank you.
 (APPLAUSE)
 MODERATOR: Governor Romney, what would you do differently that
 has not been done so far?
 ROMNEY: Well, first of all, you've got to think about who Castro
 is, and who Raul Castro is as well.
 ROMNEY: We call them strongmen -- dictators, authorative
 totalitarian leaders. And yet these are individuals who are not
 strong. Look at what they have done? Brothers to the rescue. They
 shoot a small aircraft out of the sky. People wearing a wristband
 that says "change," are arrested -- 25 of them just for wearing a
 wristband; a Catholic church is edited and people are terrified
 because a priest is just speaking his sermon.
 These people, these Castro brothers are cowards, and we have to
 recognize they are cowards.
 (APPLAUSE)
 And for that reason, the course for America is to continue our
 isolation of Cuba. It is not to say, as Barack Obama on the
 Democratic side said, that he would dignify the Castros with a
 personal visit to Cuba. That's not the way to go. Instead, it's to
 bring our friends together to isolate Cuba, to put together a strategy
 that helps all of Latin America, weakens Hugo Chavez who is propping
 up Castro.
 ROMNEY: We need a Latin American policy that frees Cuba and that
 eliminates a threat of people like Hugo Chavez.
 (APPLAUSE)
 MODERATOR: Governor Romney, for how long would we need to leave
 our troops in Iraq?
 ROMNEY: Let's talk about our mission there. This is not just
 about strategy and allies. It's not about oil. It's not about just
 the economy. It's not just about standing up for the fact that we've
 been there for a long time.
 It's about human lives.
 ROMNEY: What we're doing in Iraq relates to protecting the lives
 of American citizens, here, around the world. It relates to lives
 throughout the world. It relates to dignity and freedom.
 We're in Iraq because we want to make sure that Iraq does not
 become what Afghanistan was. What Afghanistan was under the Taliban
 was a place that they could recruit and train and launch attacks
 against us on 9/11, and other attacks throughout the world.
 The Khobar Towers, our embassies in Africa, the USS Cole -- they
 were launching attacks. The last thing America could stand for, the
 last thing we could do with the human lives that are so precious,
 would be to have Iraq become an Afghanistan. Fortunately, the surge
 is working. It's going to keep that from happening. We're going to
 have stability and security there and American lives will be saved by
 virtue of the extraordinary sacrifice of American servicemen.
 (APPLAUSE)
 MODERATOR: Governor Romney, what should we do with all the
 millions of people who are not insured?
 ROMNEY: Well, I think I'm probably the only person on the stage
 and the only governor that actually stopped talking about getting
 health care for everybody and actually got the job done.
 Working with people across the aisle, we said: Enough is enough.
 (APPLAUSE)
 You know, we're up here talking about all sort of ideas about tax
 credits and deductions, and my program has a deduction as well. We
 talk about prevention and people being health.
 But, look, the best kind of prevention you can have in health
 care is to have a doctor. And if someone doesn't have a doctor,
 doesn't have a clinic they can go to, doesn't have health insurance to
 be able to provide the prescription drugs they need, you can't be
 healthy. And you need to have health insurance for all of our
 citizens.
 And I found a way to do that without requiring raising taxes,
 without a government mandate, without a government takeover. Instead,
 I didn't want to have a -- when I said government mandate, I meant
 employer mandate. Instead, we have personal responsibility. We
 allowed individuals to buy their own policies.
 ROMNEY: Those that couldn't afford them, we helped them buy
 their policies. And you know what? It cost us no more money to help
 people buy insurance policies that they could afford than it was
 costing us before, handing out free care.
 We Republicans can get everybody insured. Let's get it done.
 (APPLAUSE)
 Governor Romney, how can we improve education -- public education
 in this country?
 ROMNEY: Well, we've got a pretty good model. If you look at my
 state, even before I got there, other governors and legislatures
 worked real hard to improve education. And they did a number of
 things that made a big difference.
 One is, they started testing our kids to see who was succeeding,
 making sure that failing schools were identified and then turning them
 around. They fought for school choice. When I became governor, I had
 to protect school choice because the legislature tried to stop it.
 And then we also fought for English immersion. We wanted our
 kids coming to school to learn English from the very beginning. And
 then we did something that was really extraordinary. We said to every
 kid that does well on these exams that we put in place before you can
 graduate from high school, we're going to give you a John and Abigail
 Adams scholarship, four years tuition-free to our state university or
 state colleges for all the kids that graduate in the top quarter of
 their class.
 We care about the quality of education. I want to pay better
 teachers more money. Teachers are underpaid, but I want to evaluate
 our teachers and see which ones are the best and which ones are not.
 (APPLAUSE)
 ROMNEY: And let me tell how our kids are doing. Every two
 years, we test the kids across the country, the NAPE exam. Our kids
 -- my kids came out number one in English in fourth and eighth grade,
 number one in math. In all four tests, our kids came out number one
 in the nation.
 These principles of choice, parental involvement, encouraging
 high standards, scholarships for our best kids -- these turn our
 schools into the kind of magnets that they can be for the entire
 nation.
 MODERATOR: Thank you, Governor.
 (APPLAUSE)
 We're going to continue talking about education. One our of
 three Hispanic students don't finish high school.
 Senator McCain, your vision of Hispanics in the future.
 ROMNEY: America needs all Americans. We're in a time of real
 need. We're the strongest nation on Earth; we're the hope of the
 Earth. But we face some extraordinary challenges -- global jihadists,
 violent jihadists, who want to bring down our nations and other
 nations.
 We face, as well, tough new competition coming from places like
 China and India, unlike anything we've known before.
 We spend way too much money in Washington, particularly on
 entitlements that are growing more and more weighty on us.
 ROMNEY: We have extraordinary challenges culturally as people
 are deciding to have kids without being married. There are all sorts
 of challenges in our country. And right now, we need to do what
 Ronald Reagan did, which is call on America's strength.
 As he faced the difficulties of the last century, he said, let's
 have a strong military and a strong economy that can outcompete the
 Russians. And let's make sure we have strong values and confidence in
 ourselves.
 The Hispanic community, like all other communities in this great
 nation, need to come together and strengthen America. Because this is
 the land of the brave and the home of the free. And Hispanics are
 brave and they are free, as are all of the people of this great
 nation.
 Thank you.
 (APPLAUSE)