CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 2015, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“SYRIA REFUGEE VOTE A ROADMAP TO 2016 ELECTION”
Anyone looking for a roadmap showing
which of California’s 53 congressional district elections will be tight next
year need look no farther than how the state’s House Democrats voted last month
on a bill that would essentially halt a federal plan to take in tens of
thousands of refugees from Syria and Iraq. The same map shows just which
Democrats feel seriously threatened a year before they come up for reelection.
Almost all of this state’s Democrats
are staunch liberals and the vast majority of them voted to back President
Obama in his self-described humanitarian effort.
This came after Republicans led by new
House Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin put forward a plan to add numerous layers
of additional security to the existing process, which already takes about two
years to vet each incoming refugee.
The GOP presumption is that hiding
among the refugees will be a few terrorists planted by the so-called Islamic
State in Iraq and Syria, which appears to have overtaken Al Qaida as the
world’s leading manufacturer of jihadi mayhem.
So far, that assumption hasn’t been
proven, even though Republicans pushing the bill cited a Paris police find of a
Syrian passport after the mid-November suicide bombings and shootings there.
The passport indicated one of the Parisian terrorists entered Europe along with
Syrian refugees via a Greek island just off the coast of Turkey. Problem was,
the passport turned out to be a probable forgery and may have been planted just
to discredit real refugees.
It certainly did that among prominent
Republicans. Every major GOP presidential candidate called for at least a pause
in America’s intake of refugees.
House Republicans voted almost
unanimously for the bill, which passed on a 289-137 vote. So did 47 Democrats.
California Democrats voting that way included Pete Aguilar of Redlands, Ami
Bera of Elk Grove, Julia Brownley of Westlake Village, Jim Costa of Fresno,
John Garamendi of Walnut Grove, Scott Peters of San Diego, Janice Hahn of San
Pedro and Raul Ruiz of Palm Desert.
Besides their votes on this bill, one
thing all have in common is that they are staunch liberals, backing a pathway
to citizenship for undocumented immigrants, gun control, access to abortions
and almost every other stance held by mainstream Democrats. Another thing all
these folks have in common is that all are seeking reelection – except Hahn.
She is now running for her father Kenneth’s old seat on the Los Angeles County
Board of Supervisors.
This still leaves her sharing one
category with the others: She fears the effect a vote to allow steady
immigration of Middle Eastern refugees might have on her election chances.
It’s hard to say how most of these
politicians felt about their votes. For sure, they knew President Obama will
veto the bill if it ever gets through both houses of Congress.
But all have reason to feel insecure.
Almost all won reelection last year in very tight races, none more so than
Costa, who was shellshocked after the previously unknown Republican farmer
Johnny Tachera led him on Election Night and only lost to him by a 50.7 to
49.3 percent margin after a month of subsequent vote counting. That was
the closest shave ever for longtime incumbent Costa. Things were just about as
tight for Bera, who bested former Republican Congressman Doug Ose by just
50.4-49.6 percent, or 1,460 votes out of about 180,000 cast.
There was also Peters, who topped
former San Diego City Councilman Carl DeMaio by barely 6,000 votes out of
190,000 cast.
The largest victory margin for any of
these folks belonged to Ruiz, who had a 54-46 victory percentage. Still not
much breathing room.
Each of these politicos knows he or
she will surely be a target for the GOP next fall and that if the Republicans
stage a strong presidential campaign, all of them could be voted out.
Which goes to show that election
returns shape votes even if no one likes talking about this powerful
aspect of realpolitik.
-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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