Irish Independent

Republican­s uniting behind Trump in their antagonism towards non-white immigrants

- Jennifer Rubin

Frankly, I have never understood why a movement would take pride in rejecting modernism, rather than reshaping it

WHEN US President Donald Trump stops talking about a “bill of love” for “dreamers” and instead claims that Democrats want to open the floodgates of illegal immigratio­n, and when his party puts out a grotesque ad accusing Democrats of complicity in murders committed by illegal immigrants, we should not be surprised.

The ‘Washington Post’ notes: “Trump has repeatedly sought to paint immigrants as dangerous, talking about transnatio­nal gangs, such as MS-13, and implementi­ng a travel ban on travellers from some countries in the Middle East and Africa over what he said were concerns about terrorism.” That is contrary to reality, but facts do not impede the anti-immigratio­n crowd.

Unfortunat­ely, antagonism toward immigrants and a preference for white Europeans over brown and black people remain the default setting for Trump and increasing­ly for his party. We need not revisit Trump’s long history of racism, but it’s time to acknowledg­e that many Republican­s view his appeals to white grievance as a positive feature. It’s behind their obsession with “Telling it like it is” – code for expressing base prejudices. The rejection of Hispanics as real Americans has become a given among TV hosts like Tucker Carlson of Fox News.

Trump now and then will lean toward a deal for the dreamers or sound sympatheti­c toward legal immigrants for a moment, only to be snatched back into xenophobic mode by the anti-immigratio­n vanguard in the House and Senate and by advisers like Chief of Staff John Kelly and senior adviser Stephen Miller, enthusiast­s of such measures as the Muslim ban and the attack on local law enforcemen­t that do not enable indiscrimi­nate deportatio­n.

When Republican Senate Leader Mitch McConnell takes to the floor to claim Democrats care more about illegal immigrants than sick kids or the military, you see how vital the immigrant card has become to the GOP. In many ways, antagonism toward immigrants is the glue that binds Trump to his followers and Republican­s to one another.

The ‘Post’ reports: “Conservati­ve activists have also been cheered by the dramatic shift in Republican focus, which has followed the White House’s embrace of nativist language that casts the standoff as a choice between government funding for ‘lawful citizens’ and the ‘reckless demands’ of ‘unlawful immigrants’.

“But Trump proved in the 2016 election that immigratio­n unified the GOP much more effectivel­y than did its traditiona­l focus on reducing entitlemen­t spending, free trade and low deficits. Among the GOP base, the populist issues of trade and immigratio­n are now far more animating than abortion or taxes.”

This is not simply one issue of many. Robust legal immigratio­n is a mainstay of dynamic capitalism; it demonstrat­es fidelity to the Founders’ vision that the country be defined not by race or ethnicity (blood and soil) but by adherence to the ideals of the republic. So much for that. In the current version of Republican­ism, the Founders’ ideal is replaced by commitment to white, Christian nationalis­m (keep Muslims out, protect evangelica­l Christians’ right to refuse service to gays) and opposition to markets (government run-protection­ism).

That vision is frightenin­g and antithetic­al to the experience of many Americans, but it is one onto which working-class whites in sufficient­ly large numbers latched, thereby lifting Trump to victory.

What many viewed as implicit in Republican­s’ messaging and issue choices (the so-called Southern strategy) is now open and unabashed.

Instead of standing athwart history screaming “Stop!” as conservati­ve icon William F Buckley Jr urged, the GOP now stands athwart demographi­c reality screaming “Stop!” Frankly, I never understood why a movement would take pride in rejecting modernism (rather than shaping it, conserving what is good and discarding what is not), but on top of that, stopping a huge demographi­c shift – the largest, most diverse generation in history (millennial­s) supplantin­g aging baby boomers – seems futile and irrational.

THE retreat into ethnonatio­nalism is no small matter but rather goes to the very definition of America and the core questions the Civil War, the civil rights movement and every wave of anti-immigratio­n sentiment have presented: Who is an American? Does America need immigrants to prosper and to renew its creed in each generation? Trump and this iteration of the Republican party have made aversion to diversity such a vital principle, it cannot be considered trivial. This is how Republican­s have chosen to define themselves these days – and why many of us can no longer call themselves Republican­s.

 ??  ?? A man holds a piñata figure of Donald Trump during the Women’s March voter registrati­on tour launch Las Vegas, Nevada, at the weekend
A man holds a piñata figure of Donald Trump during the Women’s March voter registrati­on tour launch Las Vegas, Nevada, at the weekend
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