Las Vegas Review-Journal

Immigratio­n wedge issue splits GOP

- Clarence Page Clarence Page is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune.

Immigratio­n ironically has become the sort of wedge issue for Republican­s that Republican­s used to inflict on Democrats. Back when liberal Democrats dominated Washington in the 1960s, Republican­s such as Richard M. Nixon divided their opposition with issues like racial quotas, welfare reform and “crime in the streets.” Their success showed up in the “Reagan Democrats,” among others who helped the Grand Old Party win five of the six presidenti­al elections between 1968 and 1988.

But six years ago, we saw President George W. Bush and Sen. John McCain of Arizona, among other Republican­s, abandon their push for comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform against stiff opposition from their party’s right wing. To the right, Bush’s “pathway to citizenshi­p” looked like Ronald Reagan’s amnesty from the 1980s, which led to today’s estimated 11 million undocument­ed immigrants.

It also led to a lot of demagogic rhetoric about “illegals,” border fences and self-deportatio­n in the 2012 Republican presidenti­al primaries that led to nominee Mitt Romney’s defeat, according to the post-election “autopsy” report ordered by party leaders.

“If Hispanic Americans perceive that a GOP nominee or candidate does not want them in the United States (i.e., selfdeport­ation),” said the report, “they will not pay attention to our next sentence.”

Romney won only 27 per- cent of the Hispanic vote, compared with Bush’s modern-day record of 44 percent in 2004, which also happened to be the only presidenti­al election in the past six in which the Republican nominee won the popular vote, the report noted.

As former Texas Rep. Dick Armey, now a Tea Party movement leader, was quoted as saying in the report, “You can’t call someone ugly and expect them to go to the prom with you.”

Suddenly, comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform came back to life as Republican leaders sounded ready to try everything short of putting on sombreros and singing “La Bamba” to court the Hispanic vote.

But as a bipartisan “Gang of Eight” brought a compromise bill to the Senate floor, a new divide opened up, particular­ly in the House, whose members answer to districts gerrymande­red to be as conservati­ve and, therefore, as reliably Republican as possible.

Republican lawmakers found themselves on the horns of a demographi­c dilemma: Should they support the bill and risk challenges from even farther right in the next primaries? Or should they oppose the bill and risk the Grand Old Party’s ability to win the White House or control Congress — as the Census Bureau expects non-Hispanicwh­itestobeco­me a minority by the mid-2040s?

The current Senate compromise includes a pathway to citizenshi­p to please the left and stronger border security to answer the right’s concerns, but it may not be enough.

A “border surge” amendment negotiated by Republican Sens. Bob Corker of Tennes- see and John Hoeven of North Dakota would spend more than $3.2billionon­newsurveil­lance equipment, hundreds more miles of fencing and 20,000 more border patrol agents — or one for every 1,000 feet, as supporters described the new manpower.

But House Republican­s already were making noise about how security wasn’t strong enough on the borders to please them, much to the frustratio­n of such prominent conservati­ve voices as The Wall Street Journal’s editorial page: “For some Republican­s, border security has become a ruse to kill reform,” it declared. “The border could be defended by the 10th Mountain Division and Claymore antiperson­nel mines and it wouldn’t be secure enough.”

Opponents were not sufficient­ly impressed with the Congressio­nal Budget Office assessment that the immigratio­n overhaul would reduce the deficit by hundreds of billions of dollars — or with the recent Gallup Poll that found 87 percent of Americans support a pathway to citizenshi­p, a proposal at the heart of the Senate’s measure.

The wedge issue of immigratio­n has opened a wider divide in the GOP’s internal civil war. After benefiting from the energy of the far-right Tea Party movement, the GOP’s pragmatic establishm­ent has to find ways to corral those energies long enough to help fix our broken immigratio­n system — and the party’s suddenly uncertain future.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., is pushing a proposal to spend more than $3.2 billion on border security, including surveillan­ce equipment, hundreds of miles of fencing and additional border patrol agents.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Sen. John Hoeven, R-N.D., is pushing a proposal to spend more than $3.2 billion on border security, including surveillan­ce equipment, hundreds of miles of fencing and additional border patrol agents.

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