Wall Street Journal
By Laura Meckler
December 26, 2014
Republicans will be doomed if they repeat history and blow off immigration reform, at least according to President Obama.
In
an interview published Monday, the president pointed to a “nativist
trend” within the Republican Party that has blocked action on
immigration reform in Congress and said that his recent
executive action poses a challenge to Republicans who want to pass
immigration reform legislation.
“Does
it spur them to work once again with Democrats and my administration to
get a reasonable piece of legislation done?” Obama said in an interview
with NPR. “Or does it simply solidify
what I do think is a nativist trend in parts of the Republican Party?”
If
Republicans in Congress do not act on immigration, that could spark a
major debate in the 2016 election, Obama said. That could hurt the GOP
among Latino and Asian voters.
“And
if it’s the latter, then probably we’re not going to get much more
progress done, and it’ll be a major debate in the next presidential
election,” he said.
Immigration remains a divisive topic among Republicans, and the best hope for reformers in 2016 looks to be Jeb Bush.
The
former Florida governor is exploring a presidential bid and has
frequently bucked his party on the issue, supporting a bill to legalize
undocumented immigrants. Earlier this year, he even
said many immigrants come to the U.S. illegally as an “act of love” for
their families.
Frank
Sharry, executive director of the pro-reform group America’s Voice,
dubbed Bush a “real reformer” but said he faces a tough test in winning
the GOP presidential primary while keeping
true to his beliefs.
“I
am hoping he can survive the primary; it would be awesome to have a
Republican nominee who is so pro-reform,” Sharry told reporters earlier
this month. “At the same time, I have a difficult
time imagining the party’s primary voters supporting him.”
A
new CNN poll showed Bush leading other potential GOP presidential
candidates, but indicated his immigration position could pose a problem
in the primary. Forty-two percent of self-described
Republicans said that Bush’s “act of love” comment made them less
likely to support Bush for the party’s presidential nomination.
Republicans
struggled to win over Latino and Asian voters in 2012 after a brutal
primary debate over immigration. Conservatives pilloried Texas Gov. Rick
Perry for saying during a debate that
people who oppose in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants have “no
heart.”
President
Obama’s strong Latino and Asian support helped him defeat GOP nominee
Mitt Romney, whom Democrats criticized for supporting a
“self-deportation” strategy for immigration enforcement.
“The
fact that I got — I’ve received 75 percent of the Latino vote and 70
percent of the Asian-American vote in the last two elections is
something that the Republican Party should worry about
because it’s actually fixable for them,” Obama told NPR.
“Nobody
would be happier than me to see the Republican Party try to broaden its
coalition,” Obama added. “Immigration reform, by the way, was a great
opportunity for the Republican Party to
do so.”
The
president noted that George W. Bush’s Latino outreach and support for
immigration reform allowed him to perform better at the ballot box.
Republican
supporters of immigration reform have also warned that their party has
virtually no chance of winning the White House if they don’t act on
immigration.
“If
we become the party of self-deportation in 2015 and 2016, then the
chance of winning the White House I think is almost non-existent,” Sen.
Lindsey Graham (S.C.) said on CNN’s “State of
the Union” on Sunday.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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