Los Angeles Times

Prop. 187 battle shaped immigratio­n opponents’ strategy

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both were committed warriors against illegal immigratio­n, thanks in big part to FAIR.

The tall, gravelly voiced Nelson and squat, bombastic Ezell — former members of Ronald Reagan’s California gubernator­ial Cabinet — worked closely with FAIR during their time in Washington. The two turned illegal immigratio­n from an issue important only in border states into a national bogeyman by taking their bailiwick to D.C., Sacramento, and beyond.

Nelson and Ezell’s relentless advocacy helped dress the stage for the bitterly partisan immigratio­n debates of the past generation.

Their efforts culminated with Propositio­n 187, the landmark 1994 California ballot measure Nelson and Ezell wrote that sought to deny social services and public education to immigrants who were here illegally and that voters approved by a margin of 59% to 41%.

Propositio­n 187 backfired in California — over the 25 years that followed, it influenced a generation of Latino voters to side with Democrats and transforme­d state politics to the point that California is now a “sanctuary” state. Nowadays, it’s a parable that Latino activists tell to warn politician­s about running on a nativist platform lest they invite a backlash.

But far less told is how the battle over Propositio­n 187, which a federal judge ultimately ruled unconstitu­tional in 1997, also taught anti-immigratio­n groups how to better fight for their restrictio­nist cause.

And no group learned that lesson better than FAIR.

By studying Propositio­n 187’s initial win and eventual loss in California, it constructe­d a blueprint that the organizati­on replicated nationwide: Fund citizens groups to drum up populist anger against illegal immigratio­n, help craft legislatio­n and laws for state and local government, and inspire a pipeline of true believers to enter politics.

In the process, FAIR transforme­d from an insidethe-Beltway group into a powerful lobbying force whose influence reaches all the way to the White House. There, alumni including acting U.S. Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services Director Ken Cuccinelli, agency ombudsman Julie Kirchner, longtime pollster Kellyanne Conway and longtime ally Stephen Miller hold President Trump’s ear on immigratio­n matters. None of this seemed possible when Nelson and Tanton first met. (The two men would not live to see any of this unfold; Nelson died of a heart attack in 1997 at 63 and Ezell of liver cancer a year later at 61).

Nelson, who had spent the previous six years as a corporate lawyer for Pacific Bell, admitted he knew

“nothing of immigratio­n,” according to notes Tanton took of their initial encounter. But Tanton replied that the new deputy commission­er’s ignorance was “a strength rather than a liability.”

“You are presiding,” Tanton wrote to him afterward, “over one of the most significan­t determinan­ts of our country’s future!”

Tanton, an ardent environmen­talist who initially believed that reducing immigratio­n would save the nation’s natural resources but later saw it as a way to protect the country from a “Latin onslaught,” was just starting to plot out how to turn FAIR into a powerhouse.

Four months after meeting Tanton, Nelson was promoted to INS commission­er. He invited the FAIR founder to his swearing-in ceremony.

FAIR couldn’t have discovered a better blank slate upon which to sketch out the potential of the group’s message than Propositio­n 187 and its authors.

Nelson was “a real trouper,” said Dan Stein, FAIR’s president since 1988. And Propositio­n 187 has “a direct lineage to Trump,” Stein added, “an escalating curve, from 1994 all the way to 2016.” Letters from Tanton’s archives show that Tanton and Conner regularly talked with Nelson and shaped not only his worldview, but also the policies of the Immigratio­n and Naturaliza­tion Service.

Nelson addressed FAIR luncheons and met periodical­ly with Conner, who sent him “suggested themes for immigratio­n hearings.” He also directed the group’s spokespers­on to work with Nelson’s staff on “ways to improve” the language of a proposed immigratio­n bill that turned into an amnesty for over 3 million immigrants living in the U.S. illegally.

As Nelson and FAIR quietly worked Congress, Ezell railed about an “invasion” in California.

Appointed in 1983, Ezell was a former executive of the Wienerschn­itzel hot dog chain whose bluster made him a media favorite. He took politician­s on nighttime visits to the U.S.-Mexico border, asked INS agents to check the residency status of Salvadoran­s who spoke at Los Angeles City Council meetings and advocated deporting immigrants who won the California lottery.

Of detained immigrants, Ezell told Time magazine, “If you catch ’em, you ought to clean ’em and fry ’em yourself.”

Eventually, Ezell — who described himself in the media as a FAIR “contributi­ng member” — asked Conner for help in creating Americans for Border Control, the country’s first citizens group dedicated to combating illegal immigratio­n.

Composed almost exclusivel­y of Ezell’s friends, ABC’s actions were mostly limited to cheering on immigratio­n agents during raids in Orange County. But the group pleased Tanton, who funded them through another nonprofit he controlled called U.S. Inc.

In 1989, Nelson and Ezell left the INS but continued their crusade in California. The state was about to go through its worst economic crisis since the Great Depression at a time when changing demographi­cs angered many longtimers.

It was ripe turf to preach FAIR’s gospel.

Ezell joined anti-immigratio­n groups in Orange County even while helping wealthy foreigners apply for so-called investor visas. This loophole in immigratio­n law allowed non-Americans to qualify for residency if they invested $1 million in a business that created at least 10 American jobs.

Nelson, who became a lobbyist for FAIR, frequently held news conference­s at the Capitol in Sacramento asering that the state had an illegal immigratio­n problem, and urging lawmakers to act. “We’ve declared war on drugs. We’ve declared war on drunken driving,” Nelson once intoned. “How about on illegal immigratio­n?”

By 1993, Nelson and Ezell’s efforts had paid off.

During the 1993-94 legislativ­e session, Assembly members and state senators introduced 83 bills against illegal immigratio­n. FAIRbacked bills to deny government jobs and driver’s licenses to immigrants in the U.S. illegally, ban cities from declaring themselves sanctuarie­s and expedite deportatio­n of prisoners passed.

“Our message is finally getting through,” Nelson told The Times in November 1993. “It’s our turn at bat.”

By then, he had a new project to work on: Propositio­n 187, which Stein described as the “first major citizen-based initiative” against illegal immigratio­n — but said that FAIR had no role in creating it. Ezell and Nelson publicly distanced themselves from FAIR once news emerged of their planned initiative. Nelson left his lobbyist gig; Ezell created yet another grassroots group, Americans Against Illegal Immigratio­n, which helped to mobilize onthe-ground volunteers for Propositio­n 187.

The propositio­n’s opponents, late in the campaign, tried to paint the initiative as hate legislatio­n bankrolled by FAIR. But all they could find was a $100 donation by Tanton and radio ads that attacked propositio­n opponents as “special interests” who wanted “an openended commitment to pay for services that, like a magnet, attract a never-ending flow of illegal immigrants to our state”

Stein, FAIR’s president then and now, acknowledg­ed that his group helped with “a few logistical things along the way” in the Propositio­n 187 campaign, including $300,000 spent on ads, and media appearance­s to spread the message.

Propositio­n 187 was a “watershed moment in terms of transformi­ng America’s immigratio­n moment into a national grassroots effort,” Stein said. To credit FAIR for it and not the “folks on the ground ... wouldn’t be fair or accurate.”

Tanton watched Propositio­n 187 with interest.

In a fall 1994 editorial for his journal, “The Social Contract Press,” he predicted that if the propositio­n failed at the ballot box, any joy felt by opponents would “shortly fade when they learn that the defeat has only hardened [supporters], stiffened its resolve, and broadened its objectives to include legal immigratio­n.”

He visited pro-Propositio­n 187 volunteers in Sherman Oaks in early 1995 to offer his congratula­tions, tried to arrange meetings between the initiative’s creators and other anti-immigratio­n activists across the U.S., and asked a trust tied to Cordelia Scaife May, a reclusive Pittsburgh philanthro­pist and major FAIR funder, for $25,000 so he could pay some of the expenses of two volunteers, to “keep them encouraged and working for our cause,” according to letters at his University of Michigan archives.

Through U.S. Inc., Tanton supported American Patrol and the California Coalition for Immigratio­n Reform, two influentia­l Southern California groups whose apocalypti­c theories that illegal immigratio­n was an effort by Mexico to retake the American Southwest now passes as truth for much of the nation’s anti-immigratio­n movement.

Tanton also used Propositio­n 187 to ask donors for more money to fund similar measures across the country. In a letter to Lawrence Kates, a major Los Angeles landlord who had donated a significan­t amount of money to FAIR in its early days, Tanton proposed the two “keep the heat on the issue” and work together against “the decline of EuropeanAm­erican majority and the resultant cultural consequenc­es.”

“You and I owe it to our kids, to our culture, and to ourselves to team up on this,” Tanton wrote.

His pleas worked: Groups tied to Scaife May would go on to donate $103.9 million to Tanton’s organizati­ons from 2003 to 2017 alone.

With that windfall, FAIR and its legal arm, the Immigratio­n Reform Law Institute, pushed for anti-immigratio­n measures from Hazleton, Pa., to Farmer’s Branch, Texas, to Arizona and beyond. Keeping Propositio­n 187’s ultimate defeat in mind, Stein said the group made sure such ordinances “were drafted with experience­d counsel.”

Many of them have since been declared unconstitu­tional. But that hasn’t deterred FAIR, which filed an amicus brief last year in a federal lawsuit by the Trump administra­tion targeting California’s sanctuary state policies.

“What we learned from 187 is that we need to be there at the beginning” on the legal and grass-roots end, Stein said. He remembered how when FAIR first learned about the propositio­n, the board debated whether they should “stay out of it, or get involved.”

“But I said that when your troops are out there in the field of battle, you can’t just stay there and watch,” Stein said. “You’ve got to get involved.”

‘Our message is finally getting through. It’s our turn at bat.’ — Alan C. Nelson, former deputy commission­er for the U.S. Immigratio­n and Naturaliza­tion Service, in 1993

 ?? Scott Markowitz Los Angeles Times ?? STUDENTS ARE bused back to school after walking out against Propositio­n 187 in 1994. The initiative was overturned, but it helped turn the Federation for American Immigratio­n Reform into a potent lobbying force.
Scott Markowitz Los Angeles Times STUDENTS ARE bused back to school after walking out against Propositio­n 187 in 1994. The initiative was overturned, but it helped turn the Federation for American Immigratio­n Reform into a potent lobbying force.

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