CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 2013, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D.
ELIAS
“IMMIGRATION
NEWEST BATTLE FOR CALIFORNIA GOP’S SOUL”
Repeated battles for the soul of
California’s Republican Party began in earnest in 1968, when the
ultra-conservative state Schools Supt. Max Rafferty bested moderate U.S. Sen.
Thomas Kuchel in a June primary election and went on to lose badly to Democrat
Alan Cranston, who would then be reelected three times.
The newest split in this party that
began by advocating freedom over slavery is about immigration, with moderate
elements in the state GOP wanting some sort of pathway to citizenship for
undocumented immigrants and the conservative wing holding they are all
criminals who should have no rights or privileges.
It’s
a reflection of a national battle first symbolized in 1964 by the fight over
Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater’s nomination for President, one that still sees
state parties all over America severely divided almost 50 years later.
In
those days, the battle was over segregated housing, voting rights and what was
euphemistically called “states’ rights,” the party’s conservative wing arguing
that states should be able to restrict voting, allow landlords to discriminate
on the basis of race or religion and more.
Today’s
conservative Republicans say they discriminate against no one and want merely
to limit government intrusions on individual rights, while insisting that no
illegal act – including sneaking across a border – should be rewarded.
“The GOP divide is serious and real,”
writes Stephen Frank, conservative blogger and former president of the
California Republican Assembly. “Issues like amnesty and abortion have so
divided the party that folks on both sides of those issues say if they lose,
they walk.”
Already about 14 percent behind Democrats among registered voters, the state’s GOP can ill afford to have anyone opt out. But Frank, strongly against both abortion and what conservatives call amnesty, claims that when Republican voters “no longer see a difference between the two major parties, (they) say no to the GOP.” He says that’s happened since 14 GOP senators voted for the omnibus immigration bill now languishing in the House of Representatives.
But House members have long been moved
more by what’s happening in their districts than anything else. If they
alienate their constituents, they can’t survive.
So it makes sense that Republican Jeff
Denham, whose district includes Central Valley cities like Tracy, Manteca and
Turlock has lately spoken in favor of “top to bottom immigration reform.” About
44 percent of residents in his district – a swing one since new boundaries were
drawn – are Latino.
By contrast, only about 20 percent of
residents in the district of fellow GOPer Dana Rohrabacher of Huntington Beach
are Latino and Rohrabacher adamantly opposes any law granting any sort of path
to citizenship for the undocumented. The overwhelming white Anglo majority in
his district makes it among the nation’s most conservative.
Their colleague and party mate, David
Valadao of Visalia, meanwhile, called the Senate immigration bill “monumental,”
saying he is committed to “developing a reasonable, responsible immigration plan.” No coincidence,
probably, that 67 percent of his district’s population is Latino, including
about half its registered voters.
For
the most part, this split does not carry over to abortion, the other litmus
test for Frank and his fellow conservative leaders. Almost every Republican is
pro-life. And yet, the state’s Republican convention last year voted only
narrowly to keep the party’s strong anti-abortion platform plank. So there’s
disagreement on that, too.
California
is not unique. In states as varied as Maine and Alaska, state GOP officials
have been forced out lately while their parties – like California’s – face
financial problems. “There’s been a lot of division and disharmony in the
Republican Party,” Maine’s new GOP chairman, Rick Bennett, told a reporter.
But
Frank believes the real danger to the party lies in what might happen if the
Republican-controlled House passes any immigration bill containing a route to
citizenship – which is probably necessary to get Senate concurrence and become
law.
If no
such law passes, plenty of Latino voters in districts represented by
Republicans will vote against the GOP. Of course, many would anyway.
But
if enough Republicans do go along and Frank proves correct, a large segment of
base GOP voters could stay home next year and beyond. Which means the party
faces consequences either way, and might as well search its soul and do what it
believes just and moral.
-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, visit www.californiafocus.net
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