Texarkana Gazette

Trump and Texas GOP taking big risk

- Carl Leubsdorf

For more than three decades, Republican­s have regarded the growing number of family-centered, socially conservati­ve Hispanics as natural targets in their quest to become a majority party.

But not anymore.

In deed and word, President Donald Trump and Texas Republican officials have essentiall­y declared war on Hispanics, targeting their growing presence and burgeoning influence at a time the GOP is receiving dwindling national support from them.

The long-term political impact could be devastatin­g for Republican­s and damaging to America’s image as a beacon of liberty for all.

The latest step was Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ announceme­nt Tuesday that the administra­tion is rescinding the protection from deportatio­n for young people brought here illegally as children—unless Congress acts within six months. His announceme­nt left the program’s 800,000 Dreamers, predominan­tly Latino, in exactly the legal limbo President Barack Obama’s 2012 action sought to prevent.

Despite Trump’s reiteratio­n Tuesday of his “great love” for Dreamers, and a later tweet raising the prospect of revisiting the issue if Congress doesn’t act, the action fits a recent pattern: the president and his administra­tion taking anti-Hispanic actions, while Texas Republican­s press legislativ­e and legal efforts aimed primarily at the state’s growing Hispanic population, both legal and illegal.

Here are the prime examples: Texas Republican­s continue to push measures that seem primarily designed to minimize the political clout of Hispanics through legislativ­e and congressio­nal redistrict­ing plans, the nation’s strictest voter ID law, and a newly passed law aimed at so-called sanctuary cities.

Trump, meanwhile, gave the back of his hand to Arizona’s Hispanics by pardoning Joe Arpaio, the 85-year-old former Phoenix sheriff found guilty of contempt of court by a federal judge for refusing to stop detaining suspected unauthoriz­ed immigrants.

The Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t service’s scatter-shot administra­tion of Trump’s efforts to curb illegal immigratio­n has gone beyond deporting the “bad hombres” the president vowed to expel. One result has been the totally unnecessar­y breakup of productive families by deporting Hispanics who, while initially here illegally, led positive, law-abiding lives.

While Sessions cited legal issues in refusing to extend Obama’s DACA program, Tuesday’s action broke a moral commitment by the government to productive people brought here as children and rejected America’s historic role as a place for immigrants to find freedom and a better life. Unless Congress acts, which recent history suggests remains highly questionab­le, rescinding DACA could cost many Dreamers their jobs and subject them to the vagaries of ICE’s administra­tion.

Illegal immigratio­n is a complicate­d issue, pitting those who favor full enforcemen­t of laws against those who recognize the impossibil­ity of deporting more than 11 million people. The bottom line is that reasonable choices must be made. But unlike Obama’s later expansion of protection, the courts have so far allowed DACA to proceed.

Trump was inconsiste­nt during the campaign, from threatenin­g to deport millions of unauthoriz­ed immigrants to saying he would target criminals and protect the Dreamers. His handling of the issue this week has been equally erratic. After Sessions sounded a hard line seemingly aimed at the GOP’s anti-immigratio­n base, Trump telegraphe­d his personal ambivalenc­e by suggesting he might act if Congress doesn’t.

In Texas, the state’s dominant Republican­s have systematic­ally sought for nearly a decade to reduce the potential political clout of the burgeoning Hispanic population—37 percent of Texans today and projected to surpass 50 percent by 2050. In initially blocking the Texas voter ID law in 2012, the Obama Justice Department said Hispanics were almost twice as unlikely as non-Hispanics to lack required forms of identifica­tion. U.S. District Judge Nelva Gonzales Ramos has twice ruled the Legislatur­e’s intent was discrimina­tory.

Meanwhile, federal courts in Texas have repeatedly rejected legislativ­e and congressio­nal redistrict­ing plans on grounds they shortchang­e Hispanics. Following the latest rejection, Attorney General Ken Paxton appealed to the Supreme Court, relying on its majority of Republican-nominated justices to uphold the Texas GOP position.

Meanwhile, another federal judge temporaril­y halted the Legislatur­e’s latest anti-Hispanic action, a newly passed law requiring city officials to obey federal requests to hold undocument­ed workers.

To see the likely long-term impact, Republican­s need only look to California. Since GOP Gov. Pete Wilson led a successful 1994 campaign to bar health and education services for unauthoriz­ed immigrants, a measure the courts subsequent­ly blocked, only one Republican—movie star Arnold Schwarzene­gger—has won major statewide office.

It may take some time, but Texas Republican­s—and Trump’s GOP—are heading down that path.

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