Los Angeles Times
By Noah Bierman
March 5, 2015
GOP
lawmaker worked harder than Rep. Devin Nunes to distance himself from
the right flank of his party when it risked shutting down a crucial
government agency this week
to fight President Obama’s immigration policy.
In
rebuking “a small group of phony conservative members who have no
credible policy proposals and no political strategy,” the Tulare
congressman epitomized a growing
dilemma for Central Valley Republicans like him.
Like
most Republicans, these GOP congressmen publicly oppose Obama’s
unilateral actions to loosen immigration enforcement. But the Central
Valley lawmakers have resisted
their colleagues’ efforts to wage a larger battle with the president
that would highlight Republican opposition to broader immigration
changes favored by many Latino voters and agricultural interests in
their districts.
In
fact, two of Nunes’ Central Valley colleagues -- Rep. Jeff Denham of
Turlock and Rep. David Valadao of Hanford -- have been among the most
outspoken Republicans trying
to push their party toward embracing broad immigration changes.
Their
districts have among the highest proportions of Latino residents and
voters in the country. Yet their party has been striking an especially
harsh tone on immigration
that intensified during last year’s elections, a factor that has hurt
the GOP’s efforts to rebuild a brand in California that began eroding
two decades ago over the very same issue. The difficulty facing Central
Valley Republicans may also offer a preview
for other regions of the country that still see the nation’s changing
demographics in more abstract terms.
"They
have a better perspective of the community than someone who represents
Orange County, or someone who represent Biloxi, Miss.," said Allan
Hoffenblum, a longtime
Republican consultant in Los Angeles who faults the "shrill" rhetoric
employed by some in his party.
Hoffenblum
publishes the California Target Book, a political guide that presents
Central Valley Republicans’ quandary in clear mathematical terms. Latino
voter registration
rose to 27% in Nunes’ district ahead of the 2014 election. The overall
Latino population there is even larger, at 45%, according to the 2010
Census, suggesting Latino voter participation will only grow as more
residents become eligible. In Denham's district,
26% of registered voters are Latino, while in Valadao's district,
Latinos account for 54% of registered voters and 71% of residents
overall.
Add
to that a potent agricultural sector that depends heavily on migrant
workers from south of the border, and the pressure is intense.
"It’s
not just the percentage Latino in their district but the percentage in
their district that are connected to immigrant labor. And when you cast
that net in their
district, it’s extremely wide," said Matt Barreto, cofounder of Latino
Decisions, a nonpartisan polling and research firm that works with
immigration rights groups. "They definitely need to forge out a new
brand image for California Republicans that’s going
to look a little bit different from Republicans in Georgia."
All
three men joined a minority in their party who sided with Democrats in
supporting a bill passed Tuesday to fund the Department of Homeland
Security, which had been
at risk of a Friday shutdown. GOP hard-liners in the House had pushed
party leaders to insist that the agency be funded only under the
condition that it halt Obama’s plans to allow nearly 5 million
immigrants who crossed the border illegally to remain in the
country without the threat of deportation.
Denham
and Valadao were among only 10 Republicans who voted against a January
bill that tied funding to stopping Obama’s plans, while also ending an
existing program that
has deferred deportation for 500,000 young people brought to the United States illegally as children. Nunes and House Majority Leader Kevin
McCarthy, who represents a Bakersfield district where Latinos make up
21% of registered voters, voted in favor of the
measure.
Nunes,
who has long advocated granting legal status to more farmworkers,
blamed Obama and Democrats for politicizing the immigration issue --
“pandering to Mexican American
voters pure and simple.” He said the House could not have passed the
broader bill demanded by Democrats but could have begun more serious
debate by taking up a border security bill.
“Even
though I’m for comprehensive immigration reform and always have been,
the president just made it a lot harder, and he didn’t have the
authority to do what he’s done,”
Nunes said.
Obama’s
immigration initiatives are now tied up in a court battle after a
federal judge in Texas temporarily blocked the actions in response to a
lawsuit challenging their
legality.
Denham,
in an interview, said he feels "very strongly that what the president
has done is not only an overreach of his authority, but is
unconstitutional." Yet he said
the strategy employed by some of his colleagues was ironic, given that
they would have taken away money from the agency that enforces border
security.
Denham,
who often conducts interviews with Spanish-language media and is
married to the daughter of a Mexican immigrant, has been among the most
vocal Republicans in expressing
frustration that the House failed to take up immigration reform after
the Senate passed an overhaul in 2013.
"You
would expect all members to come to the table with their ideas," he
said. "And this has been a frustration, to see a number of members just
say 'no,' and ignore a
30-year, multigenerational problem."
Immigrant
rights advocates view Central Valley Republicans with sympathy, but say
the officeholders have been marginalized as the fight over immigration
becomes more partisan.
"It
always struck us that people like Valadao, Denham and Nunes were more
interested in protecting themselves and their district than in moving
the party to do the right
thing," said Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice, a
pro-immigration advocacy group.
Giev
Kashkooli, political and legislative director for the United Farm
Workers of America, said he believed Valadao, who declined an interview
request, and Denham were
hamstrung by their lack of seniority as they tried to get to get the
House to debate the Senate’s bill in 2013.
"David
Valadao and Jeff Denham both did everything that they had power to do,
with one exception, which is they both cast votes for Speaker John
Boehner, who wouldn’t
allow a vote," Kashkooli said. He said Nunes largely sat out the fight
and that McCarthy ignored his constituents to pacify the base of his
party.
"McCarthy is totally out of step with the district on this," Kashkooli said.
McCarthy's
spokesman, Matt Sparks, said the immigration system was broken, but
that he has always opposed a comprehensive bill to fix it and that Obama
"cannot be entrusted
to enforce the immigration laws previously enacted by Congress."
Tom
Campbell, a former Republican congressman who is now the dean of the
law school at Chapman University in Orange, said he believed voters
would understand McCarthy’s
need to walk a more careful line on immigration, given his leadership
role, especially if he uses his power to help the local agricultural
industry in other ways.
"If Kevin McCarthy works a deal on water, it will prove what I just said in 10 times fold," Campbell said.
Lobbyists
for agricultural interests see immigration as a priority issue for
maintaining a workforce. Even as some have grown disillusioned, they say
they will continue
to meet with Central Valley Republicans.
"There
are plenty of Republicans around the country who don’t have a reason in
their district to see this as an economic issue," said Craig
Regelbrugge, co-chair of the
Agriculture Coalition for Immigration Reform.
"Mr. Denham and Mr. Valadao are on the right side of history on this issue," he added. "And it’s a little bit lonely."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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