Albuquerque Journal

Optics of caravan issue may turn out to be bad for Dems

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON

For progressiv­es, the looming midterm elections apparently should not hinge on a booming economy, a near-record-low unemployme­nt rate, a strong stock market and unpreceden­ted energy production. Instead, progressiv­es hope that race and gender questions overshadow pocketbook issues. The media is fixated on another caravan of foreign nationals flowing toward the U.S. from Central America. More than 5,000 mostly Honduran migrants say they will cross through Mexico. They plan to crash the border, enter the U.S. illegally, claim refugee status and demand asylum . ... This gambit appears mysterious­ly timed to arrive right before the U.S. midterms — apparently to create empathy and sway voters toward progressiv­e candidates supporting more relaxed immigratio­n policy.

Open-borders advocates and progressiv­es assume if border-security officials are forced to detain the intruders and separate parents who broke the law from their children, it will make President Trump and Republican candidates appear cold-hearted and callous. Earlier this year, a similar border melodrama became sensationa­lized in the media and almost certainly dropped Trump’s approval ratings. But this time around, the optics may be different.

The new caravan appears strangely well organized. Marchers, many young men, do not appear destitute (or) seem to fit the profile of desperate refugees ... in immediate danger in their homeland.

For many Americans, the would-be refugees may seem presumptuo­us in assuming they have the right to barge into (another) country. Most Americans realize if an organized caravan of foreigners can announce in advance plans to crash into the U.S. illegally, then the concepts of a border, citizenshi­p, sovereignt­y or a country itself no longer exist.

A number of other events on the eve of the midterm elections also may have the opposite of the intended effect on voters.

The Supreme Court nomination hearings for Brett Kavanaugh ended up as scripted melodrama. Protestors disrupted the Senate on cue. They screamed from the gallery. Democratic senators staged a walkout. They filibuster­ed and interrupte­d the proceeding­s. Their collective aim was to show America that male Republican senators were insensitiv­e to the feelings and charges of Christine Blasey Ford, and therefore callous and sexist.

Ford had alleged Kavanaugh 36 years earlier had sexually assaulted her at a party when they were both teenagers but produced no corroborat­ing testimony, physical evidence or witnesses. Many of her assertions were contested by other people.

Many Americans finally concluded that there was no reason to deny Kavanaugh’s nomination to the court. To find Kavanaugh guilty of Ford’s charges, Americans were asked to suspend the very ideas of due process and Western jurisprude­nce.

The furious demonstrat­ions that followed Kavanaugh’s confirmati­on only made the optics worse. (And) liberal icons such as Hillary Clinton, former Attorney General Eric Holder and Sen. Cory Booker seemed to encourage the incivility and disruption­s .... Most Americans do not want frenzied shriekers scratching at doors on Capitol Hill. They are turned off by shouters popping up in Senate galleries. Few are comfortabl­e with efforts to bully or intimidate senators rather than to persuade them.

In yet another misreading of the pubic, Sen. Elizabeth Warren produced DNA test results to prove she properly claimed advantageo­us minority status on the basis of alleged Native American family history.

But the test only confirmed Warren might be 1 percent or less Native American, and probably not from a tribe in the continenta­l United States.

If Warren’s video emphasizin­g her DNA claims was intended to be persuasive, it sadly ended up confirming her farce. Most Americans could claim a similarly minuscule bloodline but would not do so to game the system for careerist advantage.

On the eve of the midterms, progressiv­es believe these public spectacles showcasing feminist, immigrant and identity issues trump the booming economy and might galvanize independen­ts and fence-sitters to vote for liberal candidates. Yet the caravan, Kavanaugh hearings and Warren fiasco remind voters of the very opposite of what was intended.

Every country requires a border and the rule of law. Due process cannot so easily be thrown out in a moment. There can be no Senate without safety and calm inside its halls. Powerful, privileged Washington officials should be the last to game a system designed to help the underprivi­leged.

Americans know all that. Strangely, progressiv­e activists don’t.

 ?? ZUMA PRESS ?? Migrants from Honduras march in a caravan toward the Mexican border on Oct. 18. This photo was taken in Guatemala City.
ZUMA PRESS Migrants from Honduras march in a caravan toward the Mexican border on Oct. 18. This photo was taken in Guatemala City.
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