Los Angeles Times
By Kate Linthicum
August 26, 2015
At a
recent anti-immigrant rally in the Inland Empire, where activists stood
on a street corner chanting, “Help America, not illegals,” several
sported the same white T-shirt.
On it, in large blue letters, was a name: “Trump.”
This
has been a satisfying summer for those who favor stricter immigration
enforcement, thanks in no small part to Republican presidential
front-runner Donald Trump.
Less
than a year ago, activists watched angrily as President Obama took
sweeping executive action to shield millions of people in the country
without legal status from
deportation. But in a few short months, Trump has helped flip the
national dialogue and given rise to a new surge of calls to ramp up
deportations and wall off the Mexican border.
In taking on Jorge Ramos, Donald Trump may have tussled with the wrong media star
In
Trump, anti-immigrant activists have found a brash and unapologetic
celebrity spokesman – one whose impenitence was on display Tuesday when
he tangled over immigration
with Univision anchor Jorge Ramos after briefly kicking him out of a
news conference.
Trump’s
outrage over crimes committed by immigrants in the country illegally
has spurred congressional assaults on “sanctuary city” policies. His
proposal to end citizenship
for children born to immigrants without legal status has forced
more-moderate Republican presidential candidates to the right, with
former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and others using the controversial phrase
“anchor babies.”
“It’s
a good time for us,” said longtime anti-immigrant activist Robin
Hvidston, whose group, We the People Rising, helped organize the rally
in Ontario over the weekend.
“Donald Trump has brought these issues to the front burner. Does it
feel like public opinion is shifting? I’d say yes.”
A
certain whiplash has come to define the immigration debate in recent
years in the absence of a comprehensive fix to a system that all sides
say is broken. Fierce battles
play out episodically in Washington and at the state and local level,
with activists on both sides trading defeats and victories.
Now
the divisive issue is once again at the forefront of the presidential
campaign — a fate Republican Party leaders hoped to avoid after 2012,
when they ascribed their
White House loss in part to their failure to win over large numbers of
Latinos.
Recently,
it seemed the immigration debate had swung in favor of immigrant
advocates. Polls show a large majority of Americans support a path to citizenship, and advocates
have won important victories at the local level, with driver’s
licenses, healthcare and financial aid at public universities now
available to immigrants without legal status in some states.
In
November, after congressional Republicans repeatedly blocked efforts to
pass an immigration overhaul bill that would provide a path to citizenship for the 11 million
people living in the country illegally, Obama acted on his own.
Advocates celebrated when he announced that he would protect up to 5
million immigrants with long-standing ties to the U.S. from deportation.
But
a judge’s ruling in February to put Obama’s program on hold suddenly
halted the momentum. And Trump’s rise appears to have only accelerated
what some see as a rising
tide of anti-immigrant sentiment.
For
immigrant advocacy groups, many of which had hired extra staff and even
expanded office space in anticipation of an influx of applicants for
Obama’s program, this
summer has been a period of soul-searching and playing defense.
After
Obama announced his immigration actions last fall, “everybody was
really excited, and we declared victory,” said Cristina Jimenez,
managing director of United We
Dream. “I remember my dad crying and feeling like he finally had hope.
Now people are frustrated and people are disappointed and people are
angry.”
Since
his campaign kickoff speech in June, in which he brazenly called
Mexican immigrants “rapists” and criminals, Trump has espoused rhetoric
that appears designed to
rile immigrant advocates and fire up their adversaries. Pablo Alvarado,
director of the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, said Trump’s
campaign is “normalizing” anti-immigrant ideas and racist rhetoric long
considered fringe views.
His
campaign has been embraced by those on the extreme right on
immigration. The Daily Stormer, a website that has called for
anti-immigrant violence, endorsed Trump for
president. The Federation for American Immigration Reform, which seeks
to reduce all forms of immigration, praised Trump’s recent policy paper
on immigration as the “American workers’ Bill of Rights.”
But
Trump’s calls to end birthright citizenship, erect an impenetrable
border fence and triple the number of immigration agents are also
finding a broader audience. Polls
show him with strong support across Republican demographics.
Several
leading groups that advocate for stricter immigration enforcement,
including Numbers U.S.A. and Californians for Population Stabilization,
report that their organizations
have seen an uptick in Facebook and Web traffic in recent months.
“People
are waking up,” said Toni Holle, 60, a tea party activist from Chino
Hills. “I think some people were afraid to say that they were against
illegal immigration
because, you know, you don’t want to be called a racist. With Donald
Trump at the forefront, people feel more at ease stepping out with their
views. I think people are willing to stand up and say, ‘No more.’”
Mark
Potok, the director of the Southern Poverty Law Center, which tracks
extremist groups, said Trump “has tapped into an underlying, very angry
current.”
But
he pointed out that there are fewer organized nativist extremist groups
than a decade ago, when the vigilante Minuteman Project stationed armed
activists at the Mexican
border.
Many
immigrant supporters say Trump represents a minority view that is
getting extra airtime now because it is Republican primary season.
“You’ve
got a constituency that is struggling with change,” said Los Angeles
City Councilman Gil Cedillo, who sponsored several bills that helped
immigrants in the country
illegally while he was a state assemblyman. “It’s not the America they
thought they were going to grow up in. Trump’s response has been to
scapegoat immigrants. He says, ‘Blame them.’”
That doesn’t mean it should be ignored, Cedillo said.
“It’s
dangerous rhetoric,” he said, citing a recent case in Boston in which a
man praised Trump’s immigration views after allegedly assaulting a
homeless Latino man.
In
Trump, many see echoes of former California Gov. Pete Wilson, who
branded himself as tough on immigration during his 1994 reelection
campaign. The Republican also supported
Proposition 187, a measure that denied immigrants in the country
illegally access to public services.
Wilson
was reelected and Proposition 187 passed. But California Republicans
paid a price, as Latinos launched campaigns to register huge number of
voters and eventually
turned the state blue.
That
chapter is a lesson for how immigrant advocates should respond now,
said Angelica Salas, executive director of the Coalition for Humane
Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.
“We've got to build more political power across the state and across
the country,” she said.
Trump’s
campaign is an attack on all Latinos, she said. “He’s ignoring
everything that we are to this country, all of our contributions. It’s a
slap in the face over and
over again."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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