The Arizona Republic

GOP hits Hobbs over Title 42, not racism

- Elvia Díaz Columnist Elvia Díaz is an editorial columnist for The Republic and azcentral. Reach her at 602-444-8606 or elvia.diaz@arizonarep­ublic.com. Follow her on Twitter, @elviadiaz1.

Forget racism or culture wars. It’s still all about “open borders” for Republican­s eyeing the Arizona governor’s seat.

A new attack ad against Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Katie Hobbs focuses in part on her flip-flopping on Title 42.

But the timing of the Republican Governors Associatio­n’s ad is intriguing.

The 60-second ad hit the airwaves as a draft opinion from five conservati­ve U.S. Supreme Court justices was leaked, indicating they’ll end Roe v. Wade, the 1973 landmark abortion rights ruling.

Whether the draft ruling holds true or not, it is already changing the tune of the election, sending both Republican­s and Democrats huddling to rethink their election messaging.

Senate Republican­s reportedly met behind closed doors on Tuesday to discuss the fallout of the court leak that prompted protests in cities across the country.

Republican leaders emerged from the meeting “eager to talk about just about anything besides the substance of the draft opinion,” CNN reported.

That tells me releasing the attack ad against Hobbs now isn’t a coincidenc­e, but rather part of the Republican strategy to keep voters focused on the border, not on abortion rights.

“There’s a crisis at our border. Record surge in crossings, illegal drugs, human traffickin­g flooding into our communitie­s,’’ the narrator says in the ad, blaming Biden for it.

The narrator moves on to praise Gov. Doug Ducey and Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott for “stepping up” to “secure the border, increase patrols and take the fight to the cartels.”

The ad then hits Hobbs, who is competing with Marco López and Aaron Lieberman for the Democratic nomination to succeed Ducey – who happens to head the governors group that paid six figures to air it.

“Unfortunat­ely, Katie Hobbs showed her weakness on this crisis by trying to be on both sides of the issue,” the narrator says, referring to Hobbs flipping on Title 42.

Title 42 is a Trump-era pandemic restrictio­n that the Biden administra­tion is set to end on May 23 and which Republican­s are fighting to keep in place not as a public health measure but simply as border enforcemen­t.

Hobbs, the current secretary of state, did flip-flop on the policy rather quickly and without explanatio­n.

But that still seems a weak attack when Hobbs’ immigratio­n stance is contextual­ized and compared against her involvemen­t with the racially motivated firing of a state Senate staffer.

Is Title 42 really a bigger issue than two federal juries affirming that racism was at the heart of the firing of a Black Senate lawyer? I think not.

Then again, Republican­s are counting on the gullibilit­y of voters to believe anything they say and show them. To that end, the ad is indeed powerful because of the images it uses.

The visuals from the southern border paint chaotic scenes of drugs and people being smuggled onto U.S. soil. The images chosen for the ad may be real but also exaggerati­ons, meant to stoke fear of a “border invasion.”

Like anything else, ads often resonate not necessaril­y because of their truthfulne­ss or depth but because a sliver of truth is twisted to fit a narrative. Most people passively eat the sound bites fed to them.

There is no question that thousands of asylum seekers are showing up at the southern border and that cartels keep outsmartin­g U.S. authoritie­s. Governors, however, have limited power on enforcing federal immigratio­n laws despite their claims and rhetoric.

Yet again, talking about “open borders” remains Republican­s’ best bet to keep their base distracted.

Meanwhile, Hobbs and the Democrats can thank the heavens and the leaker of the court’s draft opinion, since talk of abortion is likely to eclipse everything else.

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