CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, MARCH 15, 2016, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“STATE
AND NATIONAL GOP IN SUICIDE PACT?”
Watch the primary election process now
playing out both nationally and in California, and you almost have to wonder
whether the state and national wings of the Republican Party have made a
suicide pact.
Yes, the result this year might see
either candidate Donald Trump or rival hopeful Ted Cruz win the party
nomination for president, but if one of them or someone else sharing their
harsh ideas on immigration does, it will almost certainly mean long-term
disaster for the GOP.
It’s hard to understand why the GOP
still hasn’t learned that lesson from California.
Equally hard to fathom is the state
party’s adamant stance on purity of registration: It’s about the only political
party, major or minor, in California that insists on allowing only registered
party members to vote in its presidential primary.
The national party’s suicidal
tendencies are getting to be as obvious as those of the state GOP organization.
You can see the self-destructiveness in what’s happened to California
Republicans since they went ultra-hard line on illegal immigration in 1994,
when then-Gov. Pete Wilson won reelection on a platform of strong support for
that year’s Proposition 187. This was the anti-illegal immigrant measure aiming
to remove children of the undocumented from public schools and health clinics
and to deny even emergency room care to all illegals.
Eventually, every part of this
proposition was struck down by federal courts, even though it passed by a 2-1
margin and was a major reason for Wilson’s win over Democratic rival Kathleen
Brown, former state treasurer and sister of the present governor.
The vote and the campaign leading up
to it struck fear in many hundreds of thousands of immigrants who had lived
here for years, even decades, but not become citizens. More than 2.5 million of
these legal immigrants became citizens and then registered to vote. Only two
Republicans have won statewide elections since – out of 30 who tried. Before
1994, California was a swing state in presidential elections, going for
Republicans most of the time.
Now it is so solidly Democratic that
neither party bothers to campaign much here in national elections.
When candidates like Trump and Cruz
insist they will deport all or most of the 11 million-odd undocumented in this
country, they spur fear in millions of legal immigrants who wonder if they’ll be
the next target. If they register to vote in percentages similar to the
post-187 California push, currently solid Republican states like Texas, South
Carolina, Georgia and more would become swing states, while swing states like
North Carolina, Iowa, Colorado and Nevada could become as Democrat-dominated as
California.
So the anti-immigrant talk may have
won for candidates among hard-line Republican voters in Iowa, New Hampshire and
other early primary election states, but it could prove disastrous in the long
term for the party, just as similar rhetoric did here.
Then there’s the seeming insanity of
the state GOP organization, which has opted to keep its presidential primary
purely Republican (presidential primaries are the only significant California races
where the top two system does not apply). On the strictly fiscal level, this
makes no sense: Taxpayers finance all primaries here. Why should any of them
not be allowed into any election they like? If Republicans want to close their
primary, shouldn’t the party foot its own bill?
By contrast, most other parties in
this state’s June balloting will allow no-party-preference independent voters
to participate. That includes the Democrats, Libertarians and American
Independents.
Besides the fact it makes no sense for
independent voters to help pay for the GOP primary and then not be able to vote
in it, there’s some other reliable, academically-developed information
Republican officials ought to consider:
When a voter casts a ballot for
someone in a primary, he or she becomes much more inclined to vote for that
person or his or her party again later.
By excluding no-party-preference
voters from their primary, then, Republicans are essentially ceding many of
their votes to the Democrats, who have long let independents take part in their
primaries.
So Republicans, already suffering from
a 16 percent voter registration deficit compared with Democrats, are denying
themselves the opportunity to build loyalty among independents.
It’s suicidal, almost crazy, just like
what the national party is doing.
-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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