About Me

My photo
Beverly Hills, California, United States
Eli Kantor is a labor, employment and immigration law attorney. He has been practicing labor, employment and immigration law for more than 36 years. He has been featured in articles about labor, employment and immigration law in the L.A. Times, Business Week.com and Daily Variety. He is a regular columnist for the Daily Journal. Telephone (310)274-8216; eli@elikantorlaw.com. For more information, visit beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com and and beverlyhillsemploymentlaw.com

Translate

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Swing State Latinos Could End Mitt Romney's White House Dream

LOS ANGELES TIMES (June 26, 2012) (Article by David Horsey):  It is becoming increasingly difficult for Mitt Romney to climb out of the hole he has dug for himself with Latino voters and, as a result, that hole could turn into a grave for his presidential campaign.

Heading into the Republican primaries, Romney did not have a Latino problem. His public pronouncements on immigration issues were reminiscent of George W. Bush who, in his two presidential campaigns, won a significantly bigger share of Latino votes than past GOP candidates. The nearly 40 percent support he received in 2004 assured Bush victories in the crucial swing states of Florida, Virginia, Nevada, Colorado and New Mexico. Winning those states is just as crucial in 2012.

But, through the long months of the Republican primary contests, Romney went out of his way to take a hard line on immigration. It may have seemed like a smart idea at the time. His party’s hard right base was suspicious of his moderate record as governor of Massachusetts and the ease with which he tacked with the wind on so many issues. Trashing the Dream Act and calling for illegal immigrants to “self-deport” allowed Romney to leap to the right of his more conservative rivals and, perhaps, helped him clinch the nomination.

Now, of course, that tactic does not look quite so clever. At this juncture in the campaign, immigration is a hot issue, thanks to President Obama and the U.S. Supreme Court. Two weeks ago, Obama made news and new friends among Latinos by declaring that young people brought into the country illegally by their parents will not be targeted for deportation as long as they are law-abiding and productive. And, this week, the high court struck down all but one section of a controversial Arizona law that aimed to crack down hard on suspected illegals.

In reaction to both these developments, Romney and his spokesmen have been vague and evasive. They have abandoned the tough rhetoric of the primaries and replaced it with bland generalities. Romney has refused to say if, as president, he would reverse Obama’s non-enforcement policy. On the Arizona law that he once declared could be a model for the whole country, he now says only that the Supreme Court ruling is “unfortunate” and that, somehow, it is all Obama’s fault.

Romney seems almost to be edging toward another flip flop, waffling over the very issue on which he was so rigid in the primary debates. This will give hyper-conservatives reason again to mistrust his ideological steadiness. Yet, if he and his campaign tacticians think his toned down rhetoric will improve his standing with Latinos, they are almost certainly going to be disappointed.

Romney’s approval rating with Latinos, the fastest growing block of the American electorate, is mired in the mid-20s, 40 points behind Obama, and there it is likely to stay. The immigration issue will soon be overtaken by other issues, most likely health care, thanks to the upcoming Supreme Court ruling on “Obamacare.” Ultimately, the focus will return to the economy. Romney stands on much more solid ground on both those issues. But, though it may be a relief for him to see immigration fade as a focus of campaign buzz, it will also mean the image of Romney as muddled and untrustworthy on immigration will be locked in place.

That will matter a great deal if the election turns out to be as close as it is expected to be. Just as a healthy slice of the Latino vote helped put Bush over the top in key swing states in 2004, a poor showing among Latino voters could mean those same states will be out of reach for Romney in 2012. And, if they are out of reach, so is the White House.

No comments: