Miami Herald (Sunday)

HISPANIC VOTE

- Irina Vilariño

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historic flow of migrants coming to the border, but she disagreed with Gamarra’s characteri­zation as to why.

Vilariño, a former Republican congressio­nal candidate, said the GOP simply wants “good people to come to the United States.”

“I am not against immigratio­n,” she said. “On the contrary. We need great immigratio­n for our businesses, for our economy.”

Trump has sought to elevate the crisis at the U.S. southern border as he vies to reclaim control of the White House this year. But in doing so, he’s also deployed rhetoric that is widely seen as anti-immigrant.

At a campaign stop in New Hampshire in December, he insisted that undocument­ed immigrants are “poisoning the blood” of the U.S. During a rally in Hialeah in November, Trump drew cheers when he promised to launch the biggest domestic deportatio­n campaign in history.

Nelson Diaz, a Republican lobbyist and former chairman of the MiamiDade GOP, brushed off Trump’s remarks, saying that the former president isn’t “against legal immigratio­n” but is simply acknowledg­ing that “the disaster that’s occurring on the southern border is unacceptab­le.”

“The biggest mistake that a lot of people make is assuming that when Donald Trump talks about closing the border and that kind of stuff, he’s saying he hates immigrants or anyone that’s foreign born, and that’s just not true,” Diaz said.

PERSPECTIV­ES DRIVEN BY POLITICS

Despite Miami’s vast foreign-born population and unique political culture, some experts said that the immigratio­n debate in South Florida is still largely driven at the national level.

Guillermo Grenier, a professor of sociology at FIU who studies immigratio­n, said that the country’s hyper-polarized political

environmen­t has made it difficult to separate voters’ attitudes toward immigratio­n from their party affiliatio­ns.

While Cuban Americans — a traditiona­lly Republican-leaning voting bloc that has dominated MiamiDade politics for decades — tend to be sympatheti­c to migrants fleeing their countries of origin for political reasons, he said, many of those voters have toed the Republican Party line in the immigratio­n debate.

“They’re thinking about the politics of it,” Grenier said. “The politics of it is: ‘We’re not in power and we want to be. We’re Republican­s, we want our president to be Republican. If wailing about immigratio­n is a way to get us there, we’ll go for that, because we’re party people first.’ ”

Still, the immigratio­n debate in South Florida is more nuanced, Grenier said. Miami is a city that has been shaped over the past 60-plus years by waves of immigratio­n, mostly from Latin America and the Caribbean, and many voters still believe in a legal pathway for people to come to the country, he said.

A survey released in November by the Latino advocacy group UnidosUS found that while more than 1 in 5 Florida Hispanics see immigratio­n as the most pressing issue for elected officials to address, exactly half said that the U.S. should provide a pathway to citizenshi­p for longtime undocument­ed immigrants living in the country.

Thirty-eight percent of Florida Hispanics said that ramping up border security was a more important undertakin­g.

Fernand Amandi, a Miami-based Democratic pollster, said Republican­s rely on the chaos at the U.S. southern border to rile up their conservati­ve base and stir fear among voters. At Thursday’s Hispanic voter town hall at FIU, Amandi noted that Biden and Senate Democrats were ready to pass a bipartisan bill intended to stymie the record number of illegal border crossings, but Republican­s blocked that legislatio­n at Trump’s urging.

“Who came out and said we are not doing this bill?” said Amandi, who is Cuban

American. “Donald Trump, the Republican nominee-in-waiting.”

PLAYING OUT IN REAL TIME

Far from the U.S.-Mexico border, Florida has its own set of immigratio­nrelated challenges.

Gov. Ron DeSantis said on Wednesday that he will deploy hundreds of state law enforcemen­t officers and soldiers to South Florida and the Keys to head off a potential surge in Haitians fleeing their embattled homeland. Haiti is in the midst of a political crisis, and its government is teetering on the brink of collapse, raising concerns among state and federal officials in the U.S. that many Haitians could make the harrowing 700-mile boat trip to Florida in an effort to escape the chaos.

National immigratio­n issues have also been front and center in South Florida’s city halls. In Hialeah, a majority-immigrant city with one of the greatest concentrat­ions of Cubans in the United States, officials have been pointing fingers at newly arrived immigrants as exacerbati­ng some of the city’s problems, including a lack of affordable housing.

In November, shortly after the Trump rally in Hialeah, the City Council unanimousl­y renamed an avenue after the former president. It also condemned Biden’s immigratio­n policies last month in an official resolution that said the “influx of illegal immigrants has brought significan­t social and economic changes” to Hialeah.

Mayor Esteban Bovo recently told the Herald and el Nuevo Herald that his concerns about the consequenc­es of migration on his city aren’t driven by anti-immigrant sentiment but by practical governance.

“It would be very, very hypocritic­al of myself to say that people are not welcome, because we’re not down with that,” he said. “But do we need the infrastruc­ture and the ability to accommodat­e people? Yes. Do we have it? No.”

 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? CBS 4 anchor Eliot Rodriguez, right, poses questions to panelists — Irina Vilariño, Jose Dante Parra, Dr. Eduardo Gamarra, Ninoska Perez and Fernand Amandi regarding the Hispanic in the presidenti­al election in November. Bucking a national trend among Hispanics, South Florida Hispanics are more likely to support former President Donald Trump’s stance that irregular immigratio­n is dangerousl­y out of control.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com CBS 4 anchor Eliot Rodriguez, right, poses questions to panelists — Irina Vilariño, Jose Dante Parra, Dr. Eduardo Gamarra, Ninoska Perez and Fernand Amandi regarding the Hispanic in the presidenti­al election in November. Bucking a national trend among Hispanics, South Florida Hispanics are more likely to support former President Donald Trump’s stance that irregular immigratio­n is dangerousl­y out of control.
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? A town-hall attendee observes a spirited conversati­on during the event on Thursday.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com A town-hall attendee observes a spirited conversati­on during the event on Thursday.

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