San Francisco Chronicle

Sessions’ suit may backfire on GOP

Opposing sanctuary laws could mobilize Latinos

- JOE GAROFOLI It’s All Political

It may be years before the courts decide the Trump administra­tion’s lawsuit that seeks to overturn California’s sanctuary laws, but the political impact will be felt in just months. And it likely won’t help Republican­s.

U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions ramped up the political tension Wednesday when he told a law enforcemen­t gathering in Sacramento that California “is using every power it has — and powers it doesn’t — to frustrate federal law enforcemen­t. So you can be sure I’m going to use every power I have to stop them.”

His underlying message will frighten immigrant communitie­s and should energize Latino voters, who already overwhelmi­ngly vote for Democrats. That could be a welcome boon for Democrats in the June primary election, because fewer Latinos vote in midterm elections than during presidenti­al years.

And Republican candidates will feel pain as they embrace Trump’s law-and-order stance to

try to attract conservati­ve primary voters, an embrace that will move them further from California’s political mainstream should they advance to the general election in November.

“Politicall­y, what it does is help Democrats by mobilizing Latino voters,” said Luis Alvarado, a GOP strategist and president of the Latino Legislativ­e Roundtable. “As I listened to Jeff Sessions speak, I imagined TV commercial­s on behalf of Democrats in the state.”

While some analysts predict that the increasing threat of immigratio­n raids has energized Latino voters in recent elections in Texas and Virginia, GOP strategist and Latino vote expert Mike Madrid said “that’s not really excitement. Being ‘energized’ usually means you’re happy. These people are voting out of anger and fear. And California is the mother lode of that. This will absolutely affect the outcome of races in California in June.”

Overall, 58 percent of likely California voters, including 53 percent of independen­t voters, 54 percent of whites and 80 percent of Latinos, support sanctuary city policies, according to a January survey by the nonpartisa­n Public Policy Institute of California.

Increased Latino turnout could affect California’s gubernator­ial campaign in multiple ways. During his speech Wednesday, Sessions blasted Democrat Lt. Gov. Gavin Newsom, who leads in most polls, for praising Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf when she warned last month of impending federal immigratio­n sweeps.

“Bragging about and encouragin­g the obstructio­n of our law enforcemen­t and the law is an embarrassm­ent to this proud and important state,” Sessions said about Newsom without using his name.

Alvarado said being namechecke­d — even anonymousl­y — by Trump’s attorney general would be worn as a badge of honor by Newsom.

“They’re popping Champagne at Newsom’s headquarte­rs because Jeff Sessions cemented him as the head of the progressiv­es,” Alvarado said.

But Madrid, who also is a senior adviser to Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Antonio Villaraigo­sa, said that while Newsom may have scored the name-check, increased Latino turnout may ultimately help Villaraigo­sa more.

“I don’t think anybody is going to remember who was name-checked in June,” Madrid said.

“The bigger story is that this is a part of a tectonic shift in politics. It’s not about one speech or one event or one day,” Madrid said. “It’s about a series of events and policies that are happening — and that Latinos and female candidates will be the beneficiar­ies. That’s because Latinos and women tend to vote for Latino candidates and female candidates.”

A January survey of 900 registered Latino voters found that 68 percent said they were “100 percent” certain that they would vote. That turnout would be off the charts for the state’s 4.5 million Latino voters, especially considerin­g that only 25 percent of all registered California voters cast ballots in California’s last midterm election in 2014.

The survey by Latino Decisions, which conducted the poll on behalf of the Latino Community Foundation, found that a bump in Latino turnout could help Villaraigo­sa, a former Los Angeles mayor. He was the preferred candidate of Latino voters, with 39 percent saying they’d vote for him in the primary, followed by Newsom with 15 percent of the vote.

The two top Republican­s in the governor’s race came out strongly in support of Sessions’ lawsuit.

Coinciding with Sessions’ visit, Rancho Santa Fe GOP business executive John Cox released a radio ad that attempted to tie the 2015 killing of Kate Steinle on Pier 14 in San Francisco by undocument­ed immigrant Jose Ines Garcia Zarate to Newsom.

“The senseless, random killing of 32-year-old Kate Steinle by an illegal alien convict, is chilling testimony to how Gavin Newsom’s sanctuary city values differ from the rest of us,” Cox says in the ad. “As governor, I promise you that on my first day in office I will act to repeal Jerry Brown and Gavin Newsom’s sanctuary state and restore the rule of law.”

Cox’s prime GOP opponent, Assemblyma­n Travis Allen, R-Huntington Beach (Orange County), welcomed Sessions’ move, something he called for in January — along with Attorney General Xavier Becerra to be arrested for flouting federal immigratio­n law. On Wednesday, Allen blasted “the Bay Area liberal elites that control California’s government.”

But Alvarado said that while that may play well in the gubernator­ial primary — where Cox and Allen are fighting over the 41 percent of the ballots expected to be cast for Republican candidates — “It becomes very difficult to defend that in the general election.”

This latest battle in the ongoing “war,” as Brown put it Wednesday, between the Trump administra­tion and California is likely to have mixed impact on congressio­nal races — particular­ly on the 10 GOP-held seats that Democrats are trying to flip.

A boost in the Latino turnout could have a bigger impact in Central Valley districts, like the one represente­d by Rep. Jeff Denham, R-Turlock (Stanislaus County), where 40 percent of the residents and 28 percent of the registered voters are Latino, according to the nonpartisa­n California Target Book, a compendium of statistics on the state’s political districts. It could also impact Rep. David Valadao, R-Hanford (Kings County), where 71 percent of the population and 57 percent of the registered voters are Latino.

Some progressiv­es are trying to capture this political energy — particular­ly among young voters who are sympatheti­c to the Democrat position on immigratio­n. On Wednesday, NextGen America, the organizati­on founded and funded by San Francisco activist Tom Steyer, announced it would be spending $3.5 million to register young voters in seven GOPheld congressio­nal districts.

But that outreach might have less of an impact in some of the targeted GOP-held seats in Orange County, like the one represente­d by Rep. Mimi Walters, R-Irvine, where only 19 percent of the population, and 12 percent of the registered voters are Latino.

However, embracing Sessions’ rhetoric may backfire, too.

“You can hold on to your base if you go that route, but the average suburban white Republican is going to think it’s meanspirit­ed and not go along with it,” said Matt Baretto, a cofounder of Latino Decisions.

 ?? Jessica Christian / The Chronicle ?? Hundreds of protesters march in Sacramento as U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions addressed a law enforcemen­t gathering to denounce California’s sanctuary laws and threaten reprisals.
Jessica Christian / The Chronicle Hundreds of protesters march in Sacramento as U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions addressed a law enforcemen­t gathering to denounce California’s sanctuary laws and threaten reprisals.
 ?? Michael Macor / The Chronicle ?? Gov. Jerry Brown and Attorney General Xavier Becerra hold a news conference on the suit against the state’s sanctuary laws.
Michael Macor / The Chronicle Gov. Jerry Brown and Attorney General Xavier Becerra hold a news conference on the suit against the state’s sanctuary laws.

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