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Daddy Yankee sings for McCain


The Latino hip-hop star drew hundreds of fans and some RNC delegates to a concert at Myth nightclub.
Tom Wallace, Star Tribune

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In what is certainly one of the RNC convention's unlikeliest matchups, Puerto Rican hip-hop star Daddy Yankee and presidential hopeful Sen. John McCain brought together Latinos young and old -- and about 40 Republican delegates -- for a concert Monday night at Myth, in suburban Maplewood.

Although McCain wasn't at the concert, he and the singer appeared together last week at a Phoenix high school, where Daddy Yankee endorsed McCain, who's 40 years his senior and on the opposite side of hip-hop's liberal leanings.

The show by Daddy Yankee -- the face of Latin America's hip-hop hybrid, reggaeton -- was put together by the Hispanic Leadership Fund. The Washington advocacy group invited RNC delegates, while Spanish radio station Radio Rey gave away tickets to its Twin Cities listeners. About 800 people attended. Most delegates thought the event was a perfect opportunity to reach Latino youth, even if Daddy Yankee's endorsement was a surprise.

"I was shocked," said Texas delegate Nelson Balido, 38, who is also a fan of Daddy Yankee. "But what you're seeing is young Hispanics becoming more independent."

Balido thinks McCain will appeal to Latinos even more than President Bush did in 2004, when he received more than 40 percent of the Latino vote. Balido even had a great hip-hop name for McCain -- "MC Cain." Get it?

Daddy Yankee's endorsement angered some fellow rappers, including Fat Joe, who called him a "sellout."

Concertgoer Roberto Ruiz, 23, of St. Paul, is on the fence about McCain but said Fat Joe went too far.

"I don't think that's cool," Ruiz said. "Everybody is different."

Florida delegate Carlos Curbelo, 28, was excited by Daddy Yankee breaking ranks in the hip-hop community. It reminded him of McCain's reputation as a maverick.

"I feel a very strong parallel between the two, because McCain has taken a lot of heat from his colleagues for the positions he's taken," Curbelo said.

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