Los Angeles Times
By Maeve Reston
September 20, 2014
When
the U.S. Senate race in Arkansas heated up this summer, Mark Pryor
found himself under attack from his opponent with a nasty — and
inaccurate — ad claiming that the
Democrat had supported giving Social Security benefits to people who
had forged identities to work in the U.S. illegally. In Georgia,
Democratic candidate Michelle Nunn has been fending off charges that she
is "pro-amnesty."
And
here in New Hampshire, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen saw her reelection race
tighten after Republican Scott Brown launched a barrage of ads faulting
her 2010 vote for the Dream
Act, which would have granted legal status to some young immigrants.
Earlier
this month, Obama acceded to pleas from a number of vulnerable
Democrats to delay until after the November election his promise to use
executive power to transform
the nation's immigration system. Though the delay angered some
activists, many Democrats in tight races were relieved, hoping that his
announcement would cool some of the heat of an issue that could energize
the GOP base, particularly in states with low numbers
of Latino voters.
But
Republicans insist that immigration remains a potent issue in many
contested Senate races. The president, they note, merely postponed his
threat to use his executive
power, and could well grant legal status to as many as several million
people now here illegally. Though it is Republicans who have stalled
immigration reform in the House, they believe Obama's delay has given
them a new opening to attack Democrats — for addressing
issues affecting Latinos only when it is politically convenient.
Potentially at stake is control of the Senate, which Republicans will
seize if they gain six seats.
Days
after the White House announced the delay, Brown laced into Obama and
Shaheen in his primary night victory speech in New Hampshire, faulting
their "failed policies
on immigration" for the surge of unaccompanied minors who came across
the border from Central America. (He did not mention that a law
encouraging unaccompanied minors to seek refuge in the U.S. passed under
President Bush, a fellow Republican.)
"A
nation without borders is not a nation at all," Brown said as he
previewed his case against Democratic incumbent Shaheen in a state where
a mere 3.2% of the population
is Latino. "In Washington, what are they doing? They're only inviting
more chaos at the border by creating amnesty."
"You
have someone before you who will do everything in my power to secure
our borders," Brown said to cheers in Concord, "to make sure that you,
and everybody else, is
safe and secure when you travel around our country."
Those
kinds of lines are playing well for Republicans in competitive Senate
races across the country, where the midterm electorate is typically more
white and conservative
than in presidential years.
Some
Republican strategists fear that the hard line adopted by Republicans
such as Brown and Tom Cotton, who is running against incumbent Pryor in
Arkansas, could further
alienate the GOP from Latino voters, who are key to their hopes of
regaining the White House in 2016.
But
demographics are on their side this year. Latinos make up 5% or less of
eligible voters in eight of nine keenly watched Senate races: Alaska,
Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan and North Carolina. The lone exception is
Colorado, where 14.2% of eligible voters are Latino, making it the one
contested state where Obama's delay in fulfilling his promise could
actually hurt the Democrat, incumbent Mark Udall.
"Certainly
in a place like Colorado, it could make a difference, partly because
there are some Hispanic leaders who have said maybe Latinos should not
turn out to vote,"
said Mark Hugo Lopez, director of Hispanic Research at the Pew Research
Center.
Udall's
campaign said the senator was disappointed by Obama's decision not to
act on immigration before the election. His opponent, Republican Cory
Gardner, has charged
that Udall and Obama are looking at the issue through "the lens of
politics," but he has been far more careful in his critical statements
than some GOP candidates in other states. (In explaining his decision,
Obama said that before he would act he wanted to
ensure the public "understands what the facts are on immigration.")
There
are long-term risks for Democrats too. While Latinos continue to blame
Republicans more than Democrats for the deadlock on immigration reform,
they showed mounting
frustration with Obama and his party in Pew's polling late last year,
particularly because of concern about the rising number of deportations
in recent years.
During
the 2006 and 2008 election cycles, Pew's surveys showed that Latinos
felt Democrats cared more about their welfare and concerns than
Republicans. But Lopez says
that gap has narrowed.
"While
Democrats are still seen as the party that has more concern for the
community, the percent of Hispanics who say that has actually come down
from its highs a few
years ago," he said. "Latinos are increasingly disappointed with both
parties overall, and increasingly disappointed with both parties on the
[immigration] issue."
It
is only because of the quirk in scheduling that Republicans face what
appears to be minimal risk of a November backlash to highlighting the
border crisis. No contested
races are taking place in states like Arizona, California, Florida and
Texas, where Latinos make up a larger share of the electorate.
Even
in states like North Carolina and Georgia, where the Latino population
is growing rapidly, the actual number of registered Latino voters is
quite small. In Georgia,
1.7% of registered voters are Latino; in North Carolina it is 1.9%.
In
Louisiana, where Latinos make up only 2.8% of eligible voters, the
absence of substantial pressure to support immigration reform has
allowed Democrat Mary L. Landrieu
to accent conservative positions on the issue.
The
Louisiana senator, who must win more than 50% of the vote in the Nov. 4
election to avoid a runoff, released an ad arguing that her likely
rival, Republican Rep. Bill
Cassidy, has not been strong enough on border security.
The
ad, which notes that Landrieu supported triple-layer fencing and has
opposed amnesty, strikes a starkly different tone than her 2013 floor
speech backing immigration
reform. Back then she said "the dumb fence" was a waste of money. But
this is an election year.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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