CALIFORNIA FOCUS
90405 FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 4, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“DONALD TRUMP AS THE NEW PETE WILSON"
As Donald Trump, real estate mogul, TV
star and Republican presidential candidate, made a whirlwind mid-July trip
around the West in his private, blue-painted Boeing 767 jet, it almost seemed
like he was trying to sabotage his own party. This was before he went off on
the military record of the GOP icon, Sen. John McCain of Arizona.
It’s been 21 years since Trump’s party
mate, ex-Gov. Pete Wilson, campaigned for reelection against illegal
immigrants, his TV commercials incessantly showing illegals streaming
across the Mexican border at San Ysidro and all but endorsing the anti-illegal
immigrant Proposition 187.
Wilson was reelected, Proposition 187
passed with a 65 percent vote and California has been solidly Democratic ever
since, the difference-maker being 2.5
million legal immigrants who gained citizenship as a self-defense tactic over
the next three years. Every poll since then has found immigration is the key
issue keeping Latinos in the Democratic column and this state solidly blue.
But the last decade or so has seen
some slippage in Latino loyalty to Democrats. Republican ex-Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger twice took more than 40 percent of their vote and surveys have
shown Wilson – once complete anathema to Latinos of all ages – is all but
forgotten.
But now comes Trump to blare the same
sort of prejudices Wilson only voiced by implication. He’s essentially renewed
the anti-Latino label Wilson hung on the GOP.
When
Trump formally announced his candidacy in mid-June, he said he was running to
stop illegal immigrant “criminals, drug dealers and rapists” from entering
America. He was aided by the untimely, seemingly random murder of new
California resident Kathryn Steinle by a five-times-deported illegal on San
Francisco's Pier 14.
But her murder was an aberration. It
turns out the illegal immigrant crime so decried by Trump and others who like
to lambaste the almost defenseless undocumented is largely a myth.
The newest U.S. Census and FBI
statistics (dating from 2013) show crime rates among Hispanics, citizens
or not, are lower than for any other major ethnic group. One reason may be
that Latinos fear deportation more than other ethnics, many of whom have
legal status because of when forebears arrived here.
Ron Unz, the Silicon Valley
entrepreneur who in the 1990s came closer than anyone else to knocking off
Wilson in a Republican primary,
classically compared two cities with very different ethnic makeups in a
lengthy article in The American
Conservative magazine.
Matching Seattle, one of America’s
whitest cities at 70 percent Anglo, with San Jose, 50 percent larger but
one-third Latino, he came to this conclusion: “Seattle’s crime rate is indeed
low, but the crime rate in San Jose is actually much lower: One third lower for
homicide or violent crime in general, with less than half the robbery rate. In
fact, none of the most heavily white major cities in America have crime rates
anywhere near as low as one-third Hispanic San Jose.”
The evidence, thus, is that Latinos,
including the undocumented, are more law-abiding than many of their neighbors,
whatever the reason.
Trump’s blathering, then, is
completely untrue.
But where the damage Wilson did to the
Republican brand among Latinos was largely confined to California, Trump could
harm the party far more widely. That’s because as he swung through the West
during July, he visited states like Arizona and Nevada, with large numbers of
legal Latino residents who have not yet been galvanized into applying for
citizenship en masse.
Trump’s rhetoric – which drew huge,
enthusiastic crowds, much as Wilson did in 1994 – has the potential to get them
started, which could convert not merely those in Arizona and Nevada into
registered (Democratic) voters, but also about 3 million latent potential
Latino voters in the dead-red Republican stronghold of Texas, last won by a
presidential Democrat when Jimmy Carter ran in 1976.
That’s why GOP figures like South
Carolina Sen. Lindsay Graham call Trump a “wrecking ball” for the GOP, one that
he plainly hopes will go away. If his party doesn’t resoundingly reject Trump’s
views, “we will have lost our way,” said Graham.
But Trump won't quietly disappear, and
if he makes a respectable run in the GOP’s primary elections next spring, he
could produce an epic, lasting disaster for his party. Just like Wilson.
-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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