Los Angeles Times

Border issues roil a faraway vote

In the remote state of New Hampshire, illegal immigratio­n is at the center of the GOP primary debate.

- BY CATHLEEN DECKER

MANCHESTER, N. H. — New Hampshire is 94% white and about as far as possible from the nation’s southern border. Nonetheles­s, illegal immigratio­n has emerged as a virulent issue in this state’s Republican presidenti­al primary.

Donald Trump is savaging Texas Sen. Ted Cruz on the state’s airwaves, charging that Cruz favors legal status for those in the country without proper papers. An independen­t group backing Florida Sen. Marco Rubio is running ads accusing Cruz of f lip- f lopping on the subject. Cruz and Rubio both cast their immigratio­n plans as uncompromi­sing while dancing around the question of how they would handle the estimated 11 million people in the country illegally.

The involvemen­t of the Republican Party’s top three candidates is driven by Trump’s vehemence, Cruz’s and Rubio’s actions as U. S. senators, and the concern of a small but persistent percentage of the state’s voters.

But in this contest, the issue of immigratio­n is also a means of demonstrat­ing generalize­d toughness at a time when GOP voters, many of them fearful of terrorism, economic uncertaint­y and cultural shifts, are demanding a forceful presence at the top of the ticket.

A pledge by Republican leaders that this campaign would be sensitive to the concerns of Latinos and other immigrants has been thoroughly cast aside in favor of claims by candidates that are often exaggerate­d. On Wednesday, Cruz used the exact language in talking about those immigrants as California’s then- Gov. Pete Wilson used in a famously controvers­ial ad during his 1994 reelection campaign.

“They just keep coming,” Cruz said during a campaign appearance in Henniker, N. H., when a voter pressed him on what he would do as president. “Until you secure the border, none of the rest of it matters.”

Wilson’s ad, using “they keep coming” as a slogan

over black- and- white pictures of people running across the U. S.- Mexican border, is often cited as a key moment in mobilizing Latino voters against the Republican­s, helping to turn the nation’s largest state into a Democratic stronghold. It aired at a time when illegal entries to the U. S. were surging. Today, the number of people in the country illegally has been on a steady decline for several years.

Immigratio­n has marked the New Hampshire campaign before, often in troubled economic times. In the midst of a devastatin­g housing crisis in 1992, Republican Pat Buchanan scorched immigrants who he said didn’t want to become “Americans” but wanted “to get the benefits of the welfare state.”

Buchanan, however, was just one candidate. Today, the issue has captured all the major contenders. Like so much in this campaign, that has been driven by Trump, who has cast immigrants in the country illegally as rapists and murderers.

The brutal ad that Trump has aired repeatedly in New Hampshire against Cruz uses the senator’s own words to condemn him. Taken from an interview with Fox News anchor Bret Baier, it shows Cruz stumbling as he tries to explain how an amendment he wrote that would have allowed legal status for some illegal immigrants was not, in fact, meant to accomplish that.

Cruz’s stops and starts are overlaid with sarcastic ripostes: “What is he talking about?” and “Yeah, right, Ted.”

A CNN/ WMUR poll taken last month showed that Trump’s ad had an audience: 11% of likely Republican primary voters considered illegal immigratio­n the most important issue in deciding their candidate in Tuesday’s primary. Terrorism was first at 34%, followed by jobs and the economy at 26%.

As they have nationally, the candidates have worked to switch the immigratio­n conversati­on away from the tricky question of what should happen to those in the country illegally, making it instead largely about ter- rorism.

During a speech Tuesday night in Exeter, Rubio raised the subject and said that as the son of Cuban immigrants he understood the issue “deeply and personally in all its complexity.” But he immediatel­y cast it in the context of the foreign threat, not the domestic dilemma.

“I know that f irst and foremost that immigratio­n and the debate about it now has to be about keeping ISIS out of America,” he said, using an acronym for the Islamic State militant group. “We have to do things differentl­y now because we face a threat that wasn’t here before,” he added, as if to explain why he has backed away from his co- sponsorshi­p in 2013 of a Senate immigratio­n compromise that would have created a path to citizenshi­p for millions of people in the country illegally.

As president he would secure the nation’s borders, Rubio pledged. “When I’m president, if we don’t know who you are and we don’t why you are coming, you are not getting into the United States,” he said.

Rubio added that he would deport “criminal aliens ... right away.” He made no mention of what to do with the millions of immigrants already here without legal status, other than to say that after constructi­ng a wall and tightening immigratio­n procedures, “after that, we’ll deal with the rest of it — not amnesty.”

Cruz and Rubio have fought relentless­ly over their positions, with Cruz accusing Rubio of favoring legalizati­on and Rubio pointing to Cruz’s amendment — the one in Trump’s commercial — as proof he has changed his tune. But the two sound remarkably similar as they campaign here.

During an event in Henniker on Wednesday, Cruz called for the same extension of the border wall, tightened restrictio­ns on visa holders and job- seekers and eradicatio­n of so- called sanctuary cities — which limit local law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s — that Rubio had cited the night before. Cruz, also the son of a Cuban immigrant, used military terms to pledge that he would multi- ply border assets so that “if there’s an attempted incursion you direct the boots on the ground to intercept.”

He insisted that “outside of Washington” there was a national consensus to secure the border and to end illegal immigratio­n, and “that’s how we solve immigratio­n.”

He also asserted, as Buchanan did a generation ago, that such immigrants were profiting from their status.

“Beyond that, we will cut off welfare for those here illegally,” Cruz said. Most welfare programs require proof of legal status.

Even after being pressed by a voter, Cruz did not detail the fate of most of those already in the country, other than to say that “every criminal illegal alien will be deported.”

Yet the questioner said Cruz’s answer had caused him to definitive­ly side with the Texas senator.

The voter, David Stotler, a teacher, said he had been considerin­g former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who supports giving legal status to immigrants without papers, until he read up on Bush’s positions.

Stotler is sympatheti­c to immigrants, he said, but has endured years of fighting for citizenshi­p for his Koreanborn wife.

“Rules are rules,” he said. “Laws are laws.”

 ?? Matthew Cavanaugh Getty I mages ?? CHRIS CHRISTIE speaks at a campaign event in Bow, N. H. The GOP candidates have steered the immigratio­n conversati­on away from what to do with those in the country illegally, making it largely about terrorism.
Matthew Cavanaugh Getty I mages CHRIS CHRISTIE speaks at a campaign event in Bow, N. H. The GOP candidates have steered the immigratio­n conversati­on away from what to do with those in the country illegally, making it largely about terrorism.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States