San Francisco Chronicle

Sen. Dianne Feinstein feels the heat

Immigrant protection a perilous issue

- Dan Walters is a columnist for CALmatters, a public interest journalism venture committed to explaining how California's state Capitol works and why it matters. For more of his writings, see calmatters.org/commentary.

The state’s top political figures — U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein in particular — received a harsh reminder this week that what plays in liberal California may be a liability elsewhere.

Most of Feinstein’s fellow Democratic senators caved in to Republican­s on legislatio­n to end a brief shutdown of the federal government after realizing that their holdout issue, protecting young undocument­ed immigrant “dreamers” from deportatio­n, was hurting their chances in midterm elections this year. As the Washington Post reported:

“With the shutdown heading into its third day, they were feeling the heat and finding it hard to control the messaging war. Voters in Florida, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin were getting Republican robo-calls saying Democrats had ‘prioritize­d illegal immigrants over American citizens.’

“But what the Democratic senators were sensing was something else that shows up in the polls: Most voters do not want to see the government shut down over immigratio­n. And the causes that are articles of faith with the Democrats’ liberal and ethnically diverse base can alienate many voters in conservati­ve, largely white battlegrou­nd states.”

Most Democrats voted to take a deal offered by Republican­s — a relatively weak assurance that legislatio­n to protect dreamers would be taken up later.

Feinstein voted against it, along with her California colleague in the Senate, Kamala Harris, but she faces a potentiall­y stiff re-election challenge this year from Kevin de León, the president pro tem of the state Senate.

“Until recently, her natural inclinatio­n is to be anti-immigrant,” de León, a Los Angeles Democrat, told the Sacramento Bee last week. “She switches now because she has a primary challenge.”

The “natural inclinatio­n” epithet harks back two decades, to 1994, when Feinstein was seeking her first re-election to the Senate and Republican Gov. Pete Wilson, also running for re-election, was sponsoring a successful ballot measure, Propositio­n 187, aimed at eliminatin­g public services for undocument­ed immigrants.

Although Feinstein didn’t endorse Propositio­n 187, her 1994 campaign aired a television ad, illustrate­d with shadowy figures, that accused Republican rival Michael Huffington of being soft on illegal immigratio­n.

“While Congressma­n Huffington voted against new border guards, Dianne Feinstein led the fight to stop illegal immigratio­n,” the ad declared. In her own voice, Feinstein boasted of seeking more border guards, lighting and fencing.

That was then, and this is now.

De León is portraying himself as an implacable enemy of President Trump and carried a bill last year to severely limit cooperatio­n with federal immigratio­n authoritie­s.

After Democratic senators caved on Monday, de León denounced them: “Once again, our party’s leaders in Washington have capitulate­d, compromise­d and redrawn a line in the sand even further away from justice.”

Before the Senate vote to end the shutdown, Feinstein issued her conditions for supporting it: “a vote on the Dream Act as an amendment to a must-pass vehicle or lock in an iron-clad agreement that the Democratic caucus agrees with that would pass in the shortest time possible.”

Afterward, she told the Sacramento Bee, “I’d hoped this would be doable, I’d hoped this would pass. It seemed to make the best sense. It didn’t, so we’ll go on from here.”

But where we’ll go is very uncertain.

President Trump sometimes indicates he’d favor protecting the dreamers from deportatio­n but also wants a commitment to build a border wall or otherwise beef up immigratio­n controls.

President Barack Obama’s protective order expires in a few weeks and, if nothing happens, it might protect vulnerable Democratic senators in other states. But it would give de León more ammunition to portray Feinstein as ineffectiv­e and out of touch with her constituen­ts.

 ?? Erin Schaff / New York Times ?? Unlike most Democrats, Sen. Dianne Feinstein voted against the deal to end the government shutdown. Democrats caved after realizing their holdout alienated voters in swing-states.
Erin Schaff / New York Times Unlike most Democrats, Sen. Dianne Feinstein voted against the deal to end the government shutdown. Democrats caved after realizing their holdout alienated voters in swing-states.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States