New York Post

‘Replacemen­t’ Dems

- Rich lowry

THE horrific massacre in Buffalo has created a debate about great-replacemen­t theory, the rancid idea that Jews are conspiring to destroy white America by importing non-white immigrants.

The Buffalo shooter was in thrall to the theory, as have been other racist and anti-Semitic killers.

The theory should be denounced by all people of good will, and indeed, it thrives only in the most sewerish precincts of the Internet.

Yet there is an attempt to tar Republican­s more broadly with the theory and somehow attribute responsibi­lity for the horror in Buffalo to them on this basis. The argument is that the likes of Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-NY) have warned that the Democratic Party views immigratio­n as a way to change the electorate in its favor and so are mainstream­ing the hateful replacemen­t ideology.

This is a smear and especially perverse since Republican­s sounding the alarm about this Democratic view have been unquestion­ably correct. No secretive cabal’s been at work — it’s all been out in the open, discussed by progressiv­e political operatives and think-tank analysts and celebrated in the press.

The left-wing Center for American Progress issued a report in 2013 titled “Immigratio­n Is Changing the Political Landscape in Key States.” It summarized its argument thus: “Supporting real immigratio­n reform that contains a pathway to citizenshi­p for our nation’s 11 million undocument­ed immigrants is the only way to maintain electoral strength in the future.”

Books were written about this idea. The widely cited 2002 book “The Emerging Democratic Majority” by John Judis and Ruy Teixeira called the Democrats “the party of transition” as “white America is supplanted by multiracia­l, multiethni­c America.” In 2016, Steve Phillips published “Brown Is the New White: How the Demographi­c Revolution Has Created a New American Majority.” His publisher’s website says the latest edition of the book contends “hope for a more progressiv­e political future lies not with increased advertisin­g to middle-of-the-road white voters, but with cultivatin­g America’s growing, diverse majority.”

Donald Trump’s 2016 victory suppressed some of this sentiment since it made it clear that white working-class voters didn’t appreciate being spoken of as if they were a relic of the past, and the 2020 election and its aftermath made the assumption that Democrats will own Latino voters forevermor­e seem increasing­ly shaky.

But the left wants to create rules that define it as perfectly acceptable for Democrats to advocate high levels of immigratio­n as a means of gaining political power and out of bounds for Republican­s to call them on it.

Washington Post writer Greg Sargent slammed Stefanik for allegedly flirting with the great-replacemen­t theory in Facebook ads last year. They warned that Democrats want a sweeping amnesty for illegal immigrants “to overthrow our current electorate and create a permanent liberal majority in Washington.”

Stefanik could have drawn her warning directly from various leftwing writers and advocates. Sargent himself wrote after Barack Obama’s victory in 2012 that the election had been “all about demographi­cs” and the outcome showed the electorate wasn’t “reverting to the older, whiter, more male version Republican­s had hoped for.”

What makes Sargent’s basic sentiment different from Stefanik’s, other than the fact that he welcomes how immigratio­n trends have changed our politics and she doesn’t?

Immigratio­n has been hotly contested throughout our history and is inherently a highly emotive issue, involving the compositio­n of our polity and core questions of national identity. It can only inflame the issue further to explicitly weaponize demographi­c change, as the left has for decades now. We should have an immigratio­n policy that serves the national interest, not the narrow interest of one political party.

By all means, further shun and marginaliz­e “replacemen­t theory,” but don’t support high levels of immigratio­n for partisan reasons and expect the other side not to notice.

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