Los Angeles Times

Rubio feels heat from all sides over immigratio­n

His role in a reform bill and the GOP’s harsh talk threaten his appeal to Latinos.

- By Michael Finnegan and Kurtis Lee

DENVER — Immigratio­n politics has long offered great promise but also threatened great peril for Republican presidenti­al hopeful Marco Rubio.

The heated fight over what to do about people in the country illegally poses a dilemma for the son of Cuban immigrants: How far can Rubio go in appealing to the party’s core of conservati­ve white voters before he undercuts his potential to win the general election?

The Florida senator vowed this month to terminate the Obama administra­tion program that offers a reprieve from deportatio­n to thousands of immigrants brought to the U.S. illegally as children. He has played down his leading role in pushing for a bill to offer a path to citizenshi­p to millions of immigrants in the country illegally.

He also has largely avoided confrontat­ion with real estate mogul Donald Trump, who has called for mass deportatio­ns, a wall on the Mexican border and an end to birthright citizenshi­p. Two other Republican­s, Ohio Gov. John Kasich and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, have denounced Trump’s agenda more forcefully.

Rubio is facing pressure on the right not just from Trump, who branded him the “king of amnesty” on Friday, but also from Texas Sen. Ted Cruz. He has accused Rubio of joining President Obama in pushing for “a massive amnesty plan.”

One of the rationales for Rubio’s candidacy was that he would broaden the GOP’s base with his presumed appeal to minority voters, especially Latinos.

But the Republican field’s tough talk about il-

immigratio­n, mostly instigated by Trump, risks alienating those voters, especially in the Southwest, where the growing Latino population­s of two swing states, Colorado and Nevada, can decide a close presidenti­al election. It also spells trouble in Florida, another battlegrou­nd where Latinos twice backed Obama by lopsided margins.

Josh Penry, who leads Rubio’s Colorado campaign, recalled that Mitt Romney took a hard line on illegal immigratio­n in the 2012 Republican primaries, then won less than a quarter of the state’s Latinos in the general election.

“It cost him profoundly,” Penry said in an interview at a coffeehous­e in Denver’s Cherry Creek area.

Rubio, however, would be the nation’s first Latino president, and his heritage could help offset any backlash from the primaries. His campaign manager, Terry Sullivan, said the Spanishspe­aking senator’s upbringing in an immigrant household would appeal to Latinos, regardless of his approach to illegal immigravid­ed tion.

“Because he can connect to that, and because he so embodies that, that resonates with them,” Sullivan said.

After Romney was routed in 2012, Rubio led the Republican Party’s drive to mend its tattered relations with Latinos, co-writing the bipartisan bill that included the path to citizenshi­p.

Soon after it passed the Senate in 2013, Rubio abandoned the bill, saying border security must be tightened before Congress takes action on the status of 11 million immigrants in the country illegally. That reversal has damaged Rubio’s standing among Latinos, said Bob Martinez, a former Colorado Republican Party chairman who is unaligned in the nomination fight.

“The fact that Rubio backed off the immigratio­n reform bill is just not good,” said Martinez, who sees the 44-year-old Rubio’s youth and speaking skills as good qualities but believes Republican­s’ seething rhetoric on immigratio­n has harmed the party’s effort to regain the White House.

Penry, a former state lawmaker who is building a county-by-county network of Rubio backers in Colorado, hopes Latinos will give the senator credit for trying to “drive solutions” on illegal immigratio­n. In a closely dilegal state where personalit­y and character can swing elections, Penry said that Rubio would strike Latinos as a charismati­c young champion of the middle class.

“He’s just not a scowling, finger-wagging, crusty old white dude,” Penry said.

Antonio Gonzalez, president of the Southwest Voter Registrati­on Education Project, said Rubio’s sometimes charming personalit­y could make him a tough rival for Democrat Hillary Clinton in states such as Colorado, where she faces a formidable challenge matching the heavy voter turnout that Obama inspired.

At the same time, Rubio “hasn’t done himself any favors with his playing all the angles on immigratio­n,” Gonzalez said.

Southwest Voter and other groups are tapping a backlash against Trump to try to sign up thousands of new Latino voters in Colorado, Nevada and other states. In Colorado, more than 200,000 eligible to vote next year remain unregister­ed.

Across the Southwest, rapid growth of the relatively young Latino population has enhanced their clout. Latinos’ share of the presidenti­al vote in Colorado grew from 8% in 2004 to 14% in 2012.

Former Denver Mayor Federico Pena, a Democrat, said Rubio’s failure to stand up to Trump would ultimately hurt him.

“Fundamenta­lly, he doesn’t represent the interests of Latinos in this state or anywhere,” said Pena, who led a rally outside the GOP presidenti­al debate in Boulder, Colo., last month to criticize the candidates on immigratio­n and launch a Latino voter registrati­on drive.

A few weeks later at a Clinton campaign house party in the Denver suburb of Aurora, senior Clinton advisor Karen Finney echoed that argument.

“The contrast could not be sharper,” Finney said of Rubio and Clinton. “She is very much for a path to legal citizenshi­p, believing that anything less than that creates second-class status.”

The rising number of Latino voters means that Rubio would need to do far better than previous Republican presidenti­al candidates among Colorado Latinos, said Joelle Martinez, executive director of the University of Denver’s Latino Leadership Institute. Ethnic solidarity could help him.

“Marco Rubio can absolutely change the game in the Southwest if he’s the nominee,” she said, “but if — and only if — he’s serious about comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform.”

 ?? Scott Olson
Getty Images ?? SEN. MARCO RUBIO has been criticized by fellow Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump, who called him the “king of amnesty” last week.
Scott Olson Getty Images SEN. MARCO RUBIO has been criticized by fellow Republican presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump, who called him the “king of amnesty” last week.
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Getty Images ?? SUPPORTERS listen to Marco Rubio at a campaign stop in Oskaloosa, Iowa. Taking a hard line on immigratio­n could cost Rubio his standing among Latinos.
Scott Olson Getty Images SUPPORTERS listen to Marco Rubio at a campaign stop in Oskaloosa, Iowa. Taking a hard line on immigratio­n could cost Rubio his standing among Latinos.

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