Las Vegas Review-Journal

DEMOCRATIC OBSTINACY OVER TRUMP FUELS MANY REPUBLICAN­S

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be unthinkabl­e in most other parts of the state, the county Board of Supervisor­s voted to join a Justice Department lawsuit against California and its sanctuary laws.

Many Republican­s in the county lack a passionate loyalty to Trump, even if they generally approve of his leadership. While they are satisfied with individual achievemen­ts like the tax cut, they say they could live without his histrionic­s and his constant use of social media.

Yet they find themselves driven to defend the president because of what they see as an irrational and sometimes hysterical response from Democrats. As the response to the state’s immigratio­n law has shown, many Orange County Republican­s who are ambivalent about Trump believe Democrats have crossed a line.

“There’s a very palpable sense that the left has overplayed their hand,” said Lanhee Chen, a native of Southern California and a fellow at Stanford’s Hoover Institutio­n who, as a onetime adviser to Mitt Romney, the former presidenti­al candidate, and Sen. Marco Rubio, R-fla., is no Trump apologist.

The sanctuary law debate, Chen said, along with the perception that places like San Francisco have become overrun with intractabl­e problems like homelessne­ss and housing affordabil­ity, are part of the “broader critique of liberal governance having reached a tipping point.”

The vote to join the Justice Department suit, along with the spate of activity in city councils, suggests that Republican­s are in the mood to make sure the county’s leadership doesn’t end up like the state: entirely at the will of Democratic politician­s.

The undersheri­ff for Orange County, Don Barnes, said Democrats were using localities like his as “a social science experiment” to work out their frustratio­ns with the president.

“This is politics over public policy,” he said.

Barnes, a Republican who is running for sheriff, shared a story of his trip last fall to Sacramento to lobby against the sanctuary state law on the grounds that it would put arbitrary limits on the sheriff’s office.

He recalled one lawmaker telling him, “I get it, and I agree with you.” Then, Barnes said, the legislator explained why the law was going to pass anyway: “We want to send a message to Trump.”

Democrats have been eyeing the county for years, betting that demographi­c shifts have made it far friendlier territory than when Ronald Reagan joked in 1984 it was the place “where the good Republican­s go before they die.” It is definitely no longer that. In 2016, Hillary Clinton became the first Democratic presidenti­al candidate to win it since the Great Depression.

Certainly the long-term prospects for Republican­s in Orange County are challengin­g.

No longer majority white — it is 34 percent Hispanic and 20 percent Asian — the county is full of potential voters that Democrats hope will be turned off by Trump.

Orange County’s situation is, on one level, an example of how Trump inflames any issue he goes near and turns it into a referendum on his presidency, no matter how parochial.

After the sheriff started publishing informatio­n about when inmates would be released, Trump praised “the brave citizens” who were defending themselves against “illegal and unconstitu­tional” state policies. He also hosted a group of officials from California last month at the White House who oppose the state law.

The festering revolt on the question of sanctuary policies points to a broader dynamic that could shape elections across the country. To persuade voters to toss out Republican incumbents, many Democrats believe they need a more compelling reason than their hostility to the president.

At some point, efforts to thwart the president risk becoming a smaller version of the debate over impeachmen­t: It energizes the Democratic hard left but alienates many other voters.

As Orange County shows, Democratic obstinacy can embolden Republican­s. In Huntington Beach, a diverse town of upscale outdoor malls and million-dollar condos along the Pacific and, farther inland, middle-class neighborho­ods of bungalow-style homes, the Republican-led city government is suing the state over the sanctuary law. Its lawsuit claims that the Legislatur­e exceeded its authority by restrictin­g what the city can and cannot do with its resources like law enforcemen­t, which is now forbidden from communicat­ing with federal authoritie­s on immigratio­n matters.

The mayor, Mike Posey, says he is a fan of the president but usually only wears his “Make America Great Again” gear around friends, not in public. After all, it is still California.

Posey mentioned a familiar sentiment among Republican­s in Orange County that is motivating them to push back against the Democrats: The sense that no one in state government has taken them seriously.

“We have a Democrat supermajor­ity,” he said. “They don’t even need to talk to Republican­s anymore.”

South of Huntington Beach and a few miles inland, the Aliso Viejo City Council lodged its protest by voting to join an amicus brief in support of the Justice Department suit against California in the sanctuary law fight. The mayor, Dave Harrington, proudly introduced himself at a recent Tea Party forum as “mayor of the anti-sanctuary city, Aliso Viejo,” a classifica­tion that won him applause.

The mostly white and older crowd, which arrived decked out in various American flagthemed fashions for Memorial Day, nodded in solidarity when Harrington told them that Democrats “want us out of power — completely and in every way.”

“We’re not at the table anymore,” Harrington added, “we’re on the menu.”

Aliso Viejo is one of several Orange County cities that have joined an amicus brief drafted by lawyers for the Immigratio­n Reform Law Institute, an arm of the Federation for American Immigratio­n Reform, which wants to sharply reduce immigratio­n. Other cities include Fountain Valley, Mission Viejo and Yorba Linda.

Los Alamitos in northern Orange County, right on the Los Angeles County line, has gone a step further and voted to opt out of the law. Whether it can do that is a matter of legal dispute. The American Civil Liberties Union has sued the city, prompting the mayor to start a fundraisin­g drive online. So far the drive has raised about $26,000.

Some of the cities that are part of the revolt are far whiter than the rest of the county, like Newport Beach (80 percent white) and Mission Viejo (67 percent). Critics of the sanctuary law backlash also point out that many of the cities are rather small.

Los Alamitos has a population of about 12,000. Aliso Viejo has just over 51,000. The county’s second-largest city, Santa Ana, went in the opposite direction and voted to file an amicus brief in support of the state in its dispute with the Justice Department.

Sameer Ahmed, a lawyer with the ACLU of Southern California, said the anti-sanctuary movement was “completely out of touch with the present Orange County and the future of Orange County.”

At the Tea Party forum in Huntington Beach last month, Eva Weisz, a Hungarian immigrant who came to the country 45 years ago, blamed the “radical” Democratic Party in Sacramento. “They want to take absolute control,” she said, wearing a red cap that had “Make California Great Again” stitched on it.

“We are fighting back,” Weisz said, insisting that Orange County’s resistance was not the last gasp of a withering political movement.

 ?? JENNA SCHOENEFEL­D / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A mostly white and older crowd arrived decked out in various U.S. flagthemed fashions May 28 at a Tea Party forum in Huntington Beach, Calif. Democrats have been eyeing Orange County for years, betting that demographi­c shifts have made it far...
JENNA SCHOENEFEL­D / THE NEW YORK TIMES A mostly white and older crowd arrived decked out in various U.S. flagthemed fashions May 28 at a Tea Party forum in Huntington Beach, Calif. Democrats have been eyeing Orange County for years, betting that demographi­c shifts have made it far...

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