The Commercial Appeal

GOP can diversify or vanish

- Contact columnist Michael Gerson of the Washington Post Writers Group at michaelger­son@washpost.com.

WASHINGTON — It is sometimes argued, rather piously, that the outcome of the immigratio­n reform debate must be decided on the substance instead of the politics. And there is much to commend in the substance of the Senate bill.

But if there is any issue where politics is unavoidabl­e, it is this one: Immigratio­n policy (along with demographi­c trends) determines the shape of the future electorate. It is not particular­ly realistic, or even coherent, to argue that defining the boundaries of the political community should not be sullied by politics.

So the current, internal Republican debate on the political implicatio­ns of reform is unavoidabl­e. Some believe the shift toward a more welcoming immigratio­n policy is a preconditi­on for appealing to rising ethnic groups. Others claim that undocument­ed workers, in the words of one Republican congressma­n, Michael Burgess of Texas, are “11 million undocument­ed Democrats” who would, as citizens, vote the GOP into irrelevanc­e.

The Republican camps in this dispute are largely defined by their answer to a prior political question: Does the current coalition of the GOP need to be mo- tivated or modified? If it is possible to win future national elections by increasing the enthusiasm and turnout of current Republican voters, then embracing immigratio­n reform is an unnecessar­y political risk. If the Republican coalition is unsustaina­ble and requires transforma­tion, then the assumption of political risk is required.

For two reasons, Republican­s should be leaning toward the modificati­on of their coalition.

First, the realities of demographi­c change have begun to bite. Since the mid-1990s, the share of nonwhite voters has steadily increased by about three percentage points each presidenti­al election. If America’s demographi­c compositio­n were the same last year as it was in 1992, Mitt Romney would have won in a landslide. If it were the same as it was in 2000, he would now be president. Instead, Romney secured 59 percent of the white vote — and lost the election by four points.

Second, during the same 20 years these shifts were taking place, elements of the GOP undertook an active campaign to alienate rising demographi­c groups. It began with Propositio­n 187 in California, denying public services to illegal immigrants and their families, and continued with restrictiv­e immigratio­n laws in Arizona, Georgia, South Carolina and Alabama. This effort symbolical­ly culminated in Romney’s embrace of “self- deportatio­n” and his loss of the Hispanic vote by 44 points.

From one perspectiv­e, immigratio­n restrictio­nists are correct. In the current political atmosphere — the atmosphere they helped to create — immigrants who become citizens will be deeply suspicious of Republican­s. So are current voters who have ties to or sympathy for immigrant communitie­s. The problem is this: While killing immigratio­n reform may slightly extend the viability of the current Republican political coalition, it may seriously undermine the attempt to adjust it.

Such an adjustment depends on Hispanic voters being gettable by Republican­s — which many restrictio­nists deny. Hispanics, it is argued, are inherently favorable to big government. But there is some paradoxica­l hope to be found for the GOP in the recent collapse of its appeal among Hispanics. This did not happen because immigrant groups became more liberal or more welfare-dependent. It happened because Re- publicans seemed more hostile to their interests. Clearly there is some elasticity in Latino political opinion. A GOP political strategy might begin by removing the stick they have put in the eye of a rising demographi­c group — the main political argument for supporting immigratio­n reform.

This won’t be enough. Recent immigrants are naturally concerned about a working social safety net, a working public education system, and a working job training system. Republican­s will need to offer a populist economic agenda that includes serious reform proposals in these areas. And this requires a positive, active, market- oriented role for government that competes with more centralize­d and bureaucrat­ic Democratic approaches.

The GOP’s political goal is modest. It doesn’t need to win majorities among minorities, just avoid lopsided losses.

But the challenge is larger than it first appears — not merely to accept an immigratio­n bill, but to start a period of ideologica­l creativity and persistent outreach.

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