The Mercury News

Dreamers wake up to reality: Democrats stand for nothing

- By Ruben Navarrette Ruben Navarrette is a syndicated columnist.

SAN DIEGO >> What ended the government shutdown after only two-and-ahalf days?

My vote goes to a devastatin­g 30-second ad that arrived on the scene with the subtlety of an airstrike.

“Democrats.” “Murder.” “Illegal immigrants.”

Those radioactiv­e buzzwords — which were featured in the spot released by President Trump’s re-election campaign just a few hours into the stalemate and echoed by Republican operatives elsewhere — likely brought the shutdown to a screeching halt.

The video — titled “Complicit” — only appeared online. But with social media, that’s good enough. Besides, Republican sources said the ad was slated to hit TV airwaves in the coming days. This prospect must have terrified Democrats.

The ad — which was the subject of chatter on conservati­ve radio shows and cable TV — was unfair and untrue.

It’s ridiculous to blame Democrats for the evil acts of some of the undocument­ed just because lawmakers insist on having a say about who should come to the United States legally and what sort of border enforcemen­t will stop those who come illegally.

That’s not called complicity. It’s called democracy.

If we play that game, I could submit that Republican­s are to blame for murders committed by illegal immigrants because many GOP lawmakers accept campaign contributi­ons from individual­s and companies that put out the “Help Wanted” signs that lure illegal immigrants to this country in the first place.

But boy, was the ad effective. Democrats seem to have quickly decided they wanted no part of any suggestion that they condoned or contribute­d to murders committed by illegal immigrants. So they caved. And the shutdown was over.

The poster boy for both the shutdown and the cave-in was Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who is a hot mess on the immigratio­n issue.

One minute, he’s vowing to protect recipients of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals from being deported when the program expires in March by giving them legal status.

The next minute, Schumer is trying to seem reasonable to mainstream voters by telling reporters that he agreed to the funding that Trump asked for to build his “big beautiful wall” on the U.S.-Mexico border; while the senator wouldn’t reveal the actual figure, two Republican senators said Trump and Schumer considered a $25 billion package.

The minute after that, Schumer gives in and walks away with nothing — except a promise by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell that the Senate will address DACA down the line.

A promise, eh? Former President Obama promised to prioritize comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform. How did that turn out?

And then, after Schumer was hammered by progressiv­es and immigrant rights groups for folding under pressure, he makes an abrupt U-turn and insists that the funding for the wall is off the table. He may have just sunk the chances for DACA relief.

All this back-and-forth tells you everything you need to know about where Democrats like Schumer really stand on the immigratio­n debate — as opposed to where they want various groups to think they stand.

They stand on the defensive. They stand with their own interests. They stand in fear of being perceived as weak on border security. They stand several steps behind the Dreamers, as the followers have become the leaders. They stand conflicted, trying to please everyone and anger no one. And so they stand on the periphery of this national dialogue, somewhere between incompeten­ce and irrelevanc­e.

Given that, why in the world would the DACA recipients — or anyone else — want to stand with them?

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