CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“IMMIGRATION
MAY TURN OTHER RED STATES BLUE”
The
Tea Party, most conservative element of today’s Republican Party, takes its
name from a historic incident. But today it appears to be
ignoring history, at least the recent political history of California.
For months, the Tea Party has
campaigned against the “path to citizenship” portion of the immigration bill
passed by the Senate in June, calling it “amnesty for illegals.” Emails from
TeaParty.org urge “a full frontal assault on every member of Congress
with a No Amnesty! Fax Blast.”
But as the philosopher George
Santayana observed early in the last century, “Those who cannot remember
history” may be condemned to repeat it.
The
political history of California’s last two decades offers plenty of object
lessons for Republicans, some of whose national leaders have taken heed by
supporting the immigration bill.
Nowhere is a repeat of this history
more likely than in Texas and Florida, two states where Republicans control
both the governors' offices and the legislatures, where large numbers of
Latinos already vote, but with large numbers of eligible Hispanics who have not
yet bothered to register or even to become citizens.
One survey found two years ago that
Texas had 920,000 U.S citizen Latinos not registered to vote and about 3
million other Hispanic residents who are eligible to become U.S. citizens but
have not applied. In Florida, where elections often have been decided by very
small margins over the last 15 years, the same study found 600,000 Latino U.S.
citizens not registered to vote.
The large numbers of non-voting Latino
citizens set those states up to follow California out of the red Republican
column into Democratic blue territory. Imagine the seismic shift if Texas,
the foundation for all recent GOP presidential campaigns, were to turn blue.
That’s what Republican members of Congress
concerned about their own party’s future probably should remember as they
decide whether or not to allow a House floor vote on the immigration bill
passed by the Senate in June.
For California was once a pretty red
state in presidential politics. Before 1994, Republicans carried this state in
nine of 12 post-World War II national elections. But the GOP has not won
here since, and the only top-of-ticket statewide victories by a Republican in
that time were those of Arnold Schwarzenegger, whose movie stardom and centrist
politics won him many non-GOP votes.
No one has the slightest doubt what
caused this shift: the 1994 Proposition 187 and then-Gov. Pete Wilson’s vocal
support for it. Within four years of that anti-illegal immigrant measure’s
passage, more than 2.5 million California Latinos applied for citizenship and
registered to vote, the vast majority as Democrats.
So there is no doubt about the power
of the immigration issue to galvanize the previously politically lethargic
among Hispanics.
Every poll of Latinos in America
shows immigration as their central issue; one Latino Decisions survey
found more than 65 percent of U.S. citizen Hispanics either have an
undocumented immigrant family member or know one personally.
Now it is Republicans in the House who
may block what would be the first federal measure since 1986 to give immigrants
here without authorization a chance to acquire citizenship, even if the path
would be long, convoluted and expensive. If the GOP manages to kill the bill,
there’s the strong possibility a tide of Latino citizens all over the country
will register and vote – against Republicans.
Yes, Republicans, especially in Texas,
say it can’t and won’t happen there. Conservative Republicans said the same
thing here in 1994.
Do the effects of the immigration
issue endure? In last year’s presidential vote, fully 18 years post-187,
California Latinos voted Democratic by an 80-20 percent margin. In the Ronald
Reagan era encompassing most of the 30 years before 187, California
Hispanics usually voted Democratic, too, but by far smaller margins of about
60-40 percent. That extra 20 percent of Hispanics, especially with a much
larger Latino vote than previously, is one big reason California became to
Democratic presidential candidates what Texas has been for Republicans – a
seemingly unshakeable base.
Republicans opposing the immigration
measure as a form of amnesty for people they call criminals say they can’t
compromise their principles. But if they don’t bend on this issue, they may
soon no longer have sufficient political clout or numbers to make a difference
on any other issue they consider a matter of principle.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
and at how well California is doing!
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