The Denver Post

Playing into Trump’s immigratio­n trap

- By Christophe­r R. Hill Christophe­r R. Hill, former U.S. assistant secretary of state for East Asia, is chief advisor to the chancellor for global engagement and professor of the Practice in Diplomacy at the University of Denver, and the author of Outpost.

Donald Trump’s presidency reminds me of nothing so much as the wars in Yugoslavia in the 1990s. At the height of the violence, a Serb friend said to me that, “I don’t like (Slobodan) Milosevic. I don’t like his methods, his cruelty, his crudeness, and his sadism. But at least someone is doing something.”

That last clause captured the essence of the entire conflict. My friend was willing to look past all of Milosevic’s abuses and brutality if it meant that Serbia wouldn’t be a victim anymore.

Of course, the idea of Serbia as a victim ran counter to the views of the other republics. To them, Yugoslavia, far from being a conspiracy to hold down Serbia, was actually a conspiracy to enshrine Serbia’s position as primus inter pares. After all, Serbia controlled the army, the secret police, and the ruling party.

In many ways, a similar pattern has emerged in the United States since Trump took office. Trump is rude and often cruel, and even many of his supporters seem to realize that they wouldn’t want their own children to emulate him. Still, he speaks to their grievances and anxieties.

Trump and his followers have homed in on issues that were not really on most other Americans’ radars, but which force voters to pick a side. Such inherently divisive “wedge issues” often provoke an equal and opposite reaction from the other side of the political divide. As each side digs its trenches, the complexiti­es and nuances of the issue tend to be overlooked.

Immigratio­n is Trump’s key wedge issue. While many Americans would simply be amused by the fact that it is more useful to speak Amharic than English in a Washington, DC, taxi, Trump has turned immigratio­n into a referendum on America’s soul. Hence, during his recent trip to Europe, Trump issued an ominous warning about immigratio­n “changing the culture” of Western societies.

In the eyes of his supporters, Trump is winning on immigratio­n, simply because he is “doing something.” Under his watch, distinctio­ns between legal and illegal immigratio­n have been cast aside, along with wonky debates about the need for skilled workers in certain sectors or locales. And if you think that Trump will acknowledg­e that immigrants built the country, you can think again. The entire issue has been reduced to a question of American identity, filtered through the prism of race.

By weaponizin­g the immigratio­n issue, Trump has convinced his supporters that they could lose their country to people with vastly different identities and tribal loyalties, owing to what he portrays as a kind of ethno-racial spoils system. In doing so, he has marshaled those who oppose immigratio­n behind the banner of their own group identity. And, at least for now, he has the numbers to win.

But wedge issues, by definition, tend to galvanize both sides. The new slogan for Trump’s opponents is “Abolish ICE” — that is, U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t, the federal agency charged with implementi­ng many of the administra­tion’s immigratio­n policies. And, among proponents of immigratio­n, even “illegal” has come to be regarded as an offensive, pejorative qualifier for any living, breathing person. Of course, the term refers not to one’s person, but to one’s immigratio­n status within a given jurisdicti­on, in this case that of the United States.

Similarly, pro-immigratio­n forces have increasing­ly denounced those who stress the need for border controls, even though they are simply advocating legal immigratio­n. Rather than debate regulation­s that could stanch the flow of undocument­ed migrants into the country, pro-immigratio­n radicals seem to doubt that there should be any laws restrictin­g the movement of people at all.

Needless to say, this plays directly into Trump’s hands. Polls consistent­ly show that a majority of Americans want border controls. To be sure, the Trump administra­tion’s policy of separating migrant children from their parents went further than most Americans were willing to accept. But if voters think the alternativ­e is no border controls, or a wave of dubious asylum claims, they will side with Trump in the end.

The immigratio­n debate underscore­s the fact that the political center in America is quickly disappeari­ng. But Trump’s radicalism should not be met with more radicalism. Trump and his supporters have selected their winning issues carefully. The best response is not to play their cynical game, but rather to appeal to a broader segment of Americans. It can be done.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States