Los Angeles Times

2 GOP hopefuls split on Trump doctrine

Denham circumspec­t as Rohrabache­r talks tough on immigratio­n.

- 10TH DISTRICT 48TH DISTRICT By Joe Mozingo and Jazmine Ulloa

At a recent backyard meet-and-greet, Rep. Dana Rohrabache­r pivoted from a campaign pledge that was eliciting silence — “new-generation nuclear energy” — to one sure to rile the Huntington Beach crowd.

“We went surfing down at Brookhurst, and Newport the day before,” the Republican congressma­n said, pointing out his teenage son and daughter. “What a wonderful place to live. We should all be grateful to God that we have this quality of life.

“But the quality of life will not survive if we have open borders and millions of …” Applause drowned out the rest.

More than 300 miles north, in Modesto, another Republican congressma­n’s relationsh­ip with California’s growing Latino population is more welcoming, even personal.

Rep. Jeff Denham often speaks of his father-in-law, a Mexican immigrant who became a citizen. He talks about a young relative who

benefited from an Obamaera program that allowed people brought to the United States illegally as children to study and work.

“I am not going to take a back seat on any issue that is critical for my community, especially one that is as personal as this one,” he said at a debate last month, pledging to work toward immigratio­n reform.

The contrastin­g views reflect the long-running tension over immigratio­n in California, which has wrestled with the highly charged issue from practicall­y the moment the state was founded. The debate could help decide two hotly contested congressio­nal races — Rohrabache­r’s in Orange County and Denham’s in the Central Valley — that both parties see as key to control of the House.

One wing of the Republican Party — saying that former Gov. Pete Wilson hobbled the GOP with his policies targeting illegal immigrants — subsequent­ly softened the tone. But the hard-liners never went away and have been thrilled to see President Trump take up the issue with renewed vigor — and a much harsher tone than Wilson ever used in the 1990s.

With the president at full roar, lawmakers such as Rohrabache­r and Denham can’t avoid the question: Are they with him or not?

A fear of outsiders

Rohrabache­r steadfastl­y stands with Trump. The top of his campaign website is a video of him railing against California’s “sanctuary” law, calling it “an invitation for criminals from all over the world to come here.” He talked about a “massive flow of illegal immigrants” changing “our quality of life.”

Unlike Denham, he doesn’t have to answer to a sizable Latino community — his district is 18% Latino, 56% white — or constituen­ts’ fear of a labor shortage. He has suggested that prisoners could pick California’s crops instead of foreignbor­n workers.

Rohrabache­r is tapping into a nebulous fear of outsiders — in an area teeming with walled and gated communitie­s — that has been at the heart of politics in coastal Orange County for decades, cementing an almost unbreakabl­e Republican hold of the area.

“I want to see the border locked down and all the illegal aliens, get them out,” said Rabin Rajkumar, 54, a medical supply salesman on disability, watching the waves by the Huntington Beach Pier with his dog one afternoon.

Rajkumar, who supports Rohrabache­r, said his father immigrated legally from Trinidad and served 10 years in the Army to get his citizenshi­p.

“People should come to our door and knock, apply for a visa,” Rajkumar said.

Adam Probolsky, a longtime political consultant based in Newport Beach, said he isn’t surprised Rohrabache­r is still making the issue central to his campaign when talking to his base, but doubts he’d put out a television commercial with him at the border talking about the wall.

The family separation­s, he said, have made it riskier for Republican­s to openly back Trump’s immigratio­n policies.

“In a time machine going back three months, it was a really clear-cut issue and much easier to use,” Probolsky said.

Rohrabache­r has handily won 15 elections in the 48th Congressio­nal District, stretching from Laguna Niguel up the coast through Newport Beach to Seal Beach, with parts of Fountain Valley and Westminste­r. But the race this year between him and his well-financed challenger, Democratic real estate investor Harley Rouda, is widely seen as a tossup, in part due to Rohrabache­r’s affinity for Russia and its strongman president, Vladimir Putin.

The district has significan­tly more Republican­s than Democrats. In 2012, voters backed Mitt Romney over President Obama, 55% to 43%. But like other conservati­ve districts with higher levels of education, voters did not take to Trump, who lost in the region in 2016 to Hillary Clinton by a percentage point.

This fear of a Democratic tipping point hasn’t toned down the 71-year-old Costa Mesa congressma­n even as GOP candidates and incumbents in neighborin­g districts take more moderate paths.

In Fullerton, Young Kim is a South Korean immigrant whose views on immigratio­n are similar to Denham’s. To Rohrabache­r’s south, Diane Harkey is running as a “tax fighter” who says children brought here illegally should be allowed to stay with visas. Rep. Mimi Walters, to the east, is largely doing the same.

Central Valley split

Republican­s in the Central Valley, however, often have to tread a tricky suburban-rural divide on the issue.

Their base voters want to hear the full-throated “build that wall” rhetoric of Trump. But farmers — like those in Denham’s district where agricultur­e is central to the economy — want to ensure their crops get picked. The problem from a political perspectiv­e is that fiery anti-immigratio­n rhetoric could provoke a high Latino and Democratic turnout on election day, sinking the GOP in many places.

“Farmers believe any crackdown on immigratio­n will cause an immediate and painful problem for their ag businesses to find labor,” said Ted Howze, a large-animal veterinari­an who ran against Denham in the primary after campaignin­g for him in the past. “They are in every elected official’s ears that this would be a problem.”

Immigrant rights activists have already been targeting the events, homes and district offices of Republican­s in competitiv­e races across the state. In August, students interrupte­d a low-key appearance by House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy in Sacramento, condemning the family separation­s and shouting, “Where’s your heart?”

Since 2012, Denham has represente­d the 10th Congressio­nal District, where his constituen­ts are more than 40% Latino and Democrats outnumber Republican­s. He was reelected with a narrow 3-percentage­point advantage over his Democratic opponent in 2016, and his race this year against former venture capitalist Josh Harder is considered a tossup.

Marco Moreno, a former secretary and treasurer for the Latino Community Roundtable of Stanislaus County, says he remembers hearing the personal stories of Denham’s Latina wife and her father in the congressma­n’s campaign ads over the years.

The central message of those ads, he said, has been the same: “He is very sensitive to immigratio­n issues since he learned from his own family how difficult it is to deal with immigratio­n agencies to get citizenshi­p. Even before Trump — way before Trump — Denham has stated the same political position on immigratio­n.”

In Congress, Denham wrote legislatio­n to help immigrants in the military get citizenshi­p and broke with his party’s leadership to try to salvage some form of the Obama program for children brought to the U.S. illegally. He wrote an op-ed in support of the effort.

In July, the 51-year-old congressma­n criticized the separation­s of nearly 3,000 families at the border and pressed the government on its reunificat­ion process. He was turned away when he knocked on the door to get a tour of a detention facility holding immigrant children in a San Francisco suburb.

Asked on CNN if he got answers, he proclaimed, “Zero!”

But Denham has voted in favor of legislatio­n to fund a border wall, make steep cuts to legal immigratio­n and give federal officials more power to penalize and deport suspected gang members and immigrants with certain criminal conviction­s who illegally reenter the country. He opposes city and state sanctuary laws.

In a Spanish-language ad released last week, national Democrats accused Denham of acting pro-immigrant to Latinos at home while supporting Trump’s anti-immigrant agenda in Washington.

‘Complex problem’

On a September morning at a Starbucks in Denham’s hometown of Turlock, Karen Cuaresma, 52, worked on her book about a “changing America.”

Cuaresma, a Vermont native who has lived in Turlock since 1998, said she, like Denham, wasn’t in favor of the family separation­s. But she said he needed to take a stricter stance on immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

“I don’t think the middle of the road is going to work,” she said, looking over her laptop and yellow legal pads of notes. “The Republican­s I know are for stricter laws. If he wants their vote, he will have to crack down on immigrants if they are here illegally. It’s like any other law, like anyone doing anything illegally.”

Several tables away, Rosie Schlenker, a 46-yearold Republican turned independen­t, said she had voted for Denham three times but doubted she would again. Although she believes in the need to tighten immigratio­n into the country, she said, the Trump administra­tion was going too far and Denham doesn’t seem to have a steady position.

Videos of immigrant children being reunited with their parents, including one of an 8-year-old boy who didn’t recognize his mother, left her rattled.

“That still bothers me,” said Schlenker, a Turlock resident. “The fact that there are still children separated from their families today, and that the children who have been reunited have been traumatize­d.”

Back in Huntington Beach, Arturo Sanchez, 82, also did not like the separation­s or the harsh rhetoric about immigrants here illegally.

He escaped Castro’s Cuba in 1964 by forging a visa to get to Mexico, before legally entering the United States as an exile.

“This is a very complex problem,” he said. “People from Mexico need work. That’s why they come here — to get a new life.”

But like most Cuban exiles of his generation, he is a die-hard Republican and otherwise supports Trump. And for this alone, he plans to vote for Rohrabache­r in November.

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 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? REP. DANA ROHRABACHE­R steadfastl­y stands with President Trump and has made illegal immigratio­n a central issue in his campaign for reelection.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times REP. DANA ROHRABACHE­R steadfastl­y stands with President Trump and has made illegal immigratio­n a central issue in his campaign for reelection.
 ?? Bill Clark CQ Roll Call ?? REP. JEFF DENHAM has written legislatio­n to help immigrants in the military gain citizenshi­p and tried to salvage a program for immigrant children.
Bill Clark CQ Roll Call REP. JEFF DENHAM has written legislatio­n to help immigrants in the military gain citizenshi­p and tried to salvage a program for immigrant children.

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