CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 2019 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, JANUARY 11, 2019 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL ASIANS SPUR BIG
NEW POLITICAL CHANGES?”
The
same sort of panic that hit California’s Latinos after the 1994 passage of the
anti-illegal immigrant Proposition 187 is now hitting many of this state’s
almost 6 million ethnic-Asian residents.
Latino
fears in the wake of 187, which sought to keep the undocumented out of public
schools, hospital emergency rooms and seemingly anyplace its authors could
imagine, led to citizenship applications and then voter registration by more
than 2.5 million Hispanics over the next three years.
They
caused a political revolution in California, which morphed from a swing state
equally likely to elect Republicans or Democrats into one of the most staunchly
Democratic states in the Union. Only one Republican has been elected to
statewide office in the last 20 years, the almost non-partisan former Gov.
Arnold Schwarzenegger who won out in the 2003 recall of ex-Gov. Gray Davis.
Now
Asian immigrants are feeling fearful because of President Trump’s ban on entry
to this country by residents of several Muslim-majority countries and his
attempts to restrict the number of political and humanitarian refugees allowed
in, plus a drive to deport Vietnamese refugees with any kind of crime on their
record, no matter how old or minor.
Asians also remember the
Japanese internment during World War II, in which 120,000 Japanese-Americans
were held in remote camps for several years.
“You
hope things like that can’t happen again, but they really can,” said one green
card holder from Thailand. “So I will become a citizen.”
Like
her, thousands of Asians in California, from countries as diverse as China, the
Philippines and India, see citizenship as the best protection from a potential
future expulsion.
If they
become citizens in anything like the proportions of Latinos who felt similarly
in California after passage of 187, they could spur vast political changes well
beyond this state’s borders. In fact, if both they and citizenship-eligible
Latino immigrants ever register in large numbers, they could turn several
once-solid Republican states into battlegrounds or cause them to lean Democratic.
And
Asians here are applying, although there are impediments Latinos did not face
in the late 1990s. Example: Of the 220,000 immigrants in Orange County now
eligible for naturalization, nearby 30 percent are Asian. Of them, about 4,500
applied for naturalization through the first three quarters of 2017. If that
trend continues statewide for the remainder of Trump’s current term, more than
150,000 Asians will be added to California’s voting rolls.
Because
they’re registering largely for the same reasons as Latinos once did, they
probably won’t change this state’s political composition. But what about other
states? Taking Texas as an example, more than 680,000 Asians are now eligible
for citizenship but have not applied. That could make for big change in a state
that in November almost gave a Democrats their first statewide victory in more
than 20 years.
Yes,
the $725 naturalization application fee is a roadblock for many. So is the required
blizzard of paperwork. But Texas saw more than 20,000 citizenship applications
from Asians last year. If Latinos, many even more apprehensive about Trump’s
policies than Asians, register in Texas in similar percentages – and they have
not yet – they could combine with Asians to turn Texas Democratic. For that state
contains more than 3 million Hispanics who have not sought naturalization
despite being eligible.
For
sure, the numbers indicate fear among both Latinos and Asians has not reached
the same levels it did among California Hispanics after 187.
But what
happens when and if Trump begins serious work on his long-advertised border
wall? And what if he attempts mass deportations of illegal immigrants, as
former Attorney General Jeff Sessions advocated during his days in the Senate?
For
sure, hate crimes against immigrants of all kinds increased during Trump’s
presidential campaign and his first year in office. If that trend accelerates,
it may spur the kind of fears that pushed Latinos to get naturalized here.
Isaac
Newton’s third law of motion tells us that for every action there is an equal
and opposite reaction. Just as former President Obama’s policies produced the
backlash that elected Trump, so Trump’s policies may already have begun
producing an even stronger national backlash against him and his party.
-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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