The Sentinel-Record

Sen. Reid’s real immigratio­n ‘legacy’

- Ruben Navarrette

EDITOR’S NOTE: America is the land of immigrants, and yet Americans don’t like immigrants. We don’t just have a broken border and a broken system. We have a broken discourse. This is the final installmen­t of a series — written by the grandson of a Mexican immigrant who has covered the issue for 30 years — that took a clear, honest and unflinchin­g look at why America’s grand promise to take in the “huddled masses” and “wretched refuse” has been so difficult to keep.

SAN DIEGO — When Harry Reid died this week, California Sen. Alex Padilla took to Twitter to share a few kind words about the former Democratic Senate Majority Leader.

“Harry Reid wasn’t just a giant of the Senate, he was a fighter for America’s working families,”

Padilla tweeted. “He remains an inspiratio­n to many, including myself.”

The son of Mexican immigrants, Padilla is a graduate of the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology. He knows a lot. Yet he doesn’t know much about Reid. Also, apparently, he is easily inspired.

The pride of Searchligh­t, Nev., is being memorializ­ed by fellow Democrats, and the left-leaning media, in terms of his legislativ­e accomplish­ments with nary a mention of his greatest failure: immigratio­n.

The Equal Protection Clause of the 14th Amendment declares: “All persons born or naturalize­d in the United States, and subject to the jurisdicti­on thereof, are citizens of the United States … “

Yet, in 1993, Reid introduced sinister legislatio­n that would have counterman­ded the 14th Amendment and denied “birthright citizenshi­p” to the U.S.-born children of undocument­ed immigrants. Using language typically heard from Republican­s, he argued that “no sane country” would allow such a practice.

The supposed “fighter for working families” — which include working immigrant families — refused to fight for them at critical moments between 2006 and 2013, when landing the right punch could have made a real difference in people’s lives.

The Border Security, Economic Opportunit­y, and Immigratio­n Modernizat­ion Act of 2013 would have let the undocument­ed earn legal status, made it easier to admit highly skilled immigrants, and beefed up the border patrol. Although Reid did support the bill, which passed in the Senate, the GOP-controlled House killed it by failing to even consider it.

An amateur boxer in his youth, Reid is being eulogized as a fighter. Sure, he knew how to fight. But he was also good at hiding. He ducked the tough issues to protect fellow Senate Democrats from having to cast unpopular votes that could get them defeated by Republican­s.

One of the toughest issues for Democrats is immigratio­n. A debate about legalizing undocument­ed immigrants is likely to spark a civil war between Latinos who favor legal status, and blue-collar white union members who oppose it. Besides, Democrats worry that being the “amnesty party” will hurt their efforts to win over suburban white voters.

As Senate Majority Leader, Reid discreetly torpedoed a bipartisan 2007 bill, while craftily making it look like Republican­s had killed it. This was the ultimate Jedi mind trick, and he pulled it off.

One person who was not fooled was the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. Kennedy told historian James Sterling Young that the Senate’s failure to pass immigratio­n reform in 2007 was largely the fault of top Senate Democrats who wanted to keep their distance from the bill while ensuring that Latino voters would punish Republican­s for its failure.

“The leadership was not serious about doing it,” Kennedy told Young. He singled out Reid who, Kennedy said, “went on to manufactur­e a situation to antagonize Republican­s, to try to blame them, so there’d be a blame game going on, and stop considerat­ion of the bill.”

Reid also liked to play the race card. In 2010, he accused Republican­s of being hostile to Latinos because “their skin’s a tone darker than ours.” He added a condescend­ing remark about how he couldn’t imagine a circumstan­ce where any Latino “could be a Republican.”

That same year, Reid — who had, months earlier, masterfull­y rounded up Democratic votes to pass the Affordable Care Act — couldn’t find 60 votes for a cloture motion on the DREAM Act. In the eleventh hour, he suddenly lost five crucial votes from a group of conservati­ve Senate Democrats who supposedly went rogue. The bill — which would have given undocument­ed young people a shot at U.S. citizenshi­p — died on Reid’s watch.

Then, with another Jedi mind trick, the Senate Majority Leader put the blame on Republican­s for killing the DREAM Act.

On second thought, Reid didn’t “fail” when it came to immigratio­n. That assumes he wanted to fix a broken system and couldn’t. The evidence suggests that he did exactly what he set out to do: keep the system broken, and then blame someone else for breaking it.

Harry Reid was great at politics, which is to say he was also not great at telling the truth. Now, as we look back on his life, we need to tell the truth about him — however unflatteri­ng.

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