NPR
By Asma Khalid
August 31, 2015
The
current front-runner in the Republican presidential primary, Donald
Trump, is sparking a debate about immigration that's beginning to
alienate some conservative Latinos.
"He
drowns out a lot of the conservative field, and it's very bad for the
Republican Party," said Ricky Salabarria, a stylish 22-year-old Hispanic
consultant from Florida,
who dons a pair of Ray-Ban sunglasses tucked into his pink dress shirt
at a bar in Northern Virginia.
His
family is originally from Cuba and Spain. And he feels alienated by the
current immigration rhetoric dominating his party's primary on
immigration.
"Being
Hispanic, being gay, it all sort of like makes it hard to be a part of
the GOP right now," Salabarria said. "I don't feel like my views are
being represented very
well."
Heated Rhetoric
Trump,
who seems to only gain steam as the days go on, described Mexican
immigrants coming into the U.S. illegally as "rapists." Then, in his
first policy proposal — on
immigration — he advocated for stripping the constitution of the 14th
Amendment, which automatically grants citizenship to those born in the
United States.
That
sparked a week of candidates dancing around — or tripping over — the
issue of "anchor babies," children born in the U.S. to immigrants in the
country illegally. Trump
also wants to put up a wall and deport the 11 million or so immigrants
in the U.S. illegally.
It's
all led to heated rhetoric from the candidates. Ben Carson called for
using armed drones on the border, and just this weekend, New Jersey Gov.
Chris Christie said
immigrants on visa should be tracked like FedEx packages.
"At
any moment, FedEx can tell you where that package is," Christie said in
New Hampshire Saturday. "It's on the truck. It's at the station. It's
on the airplane. Yet
we let people come to this country with visas, and the minute they come
in, we lose track of them."
Christie,
who is supposed to be of the more moderate wing of the party, added
that he would ask FedEx's founder, Fred Smith, to work for him for three
months to set up
a program because, "We need to have a system that tracks you from the
moment you come in."
Christie, by the way, called criticism of his comments "ridiculous" on Fox News Sunday.
Not Helping GOP Cause
When the Republicans failed to win the White House in 2012, they conducted an autopsy that said:
When
he was asked why he still votes Republican if he doesn't think his
identity politics align with the party, Salabarria explained, "I think a
lot of it has to do with
the idea of free-market economy, limited government. I think those
ideals still ring true, and I think that's at the core of what being a
conservative is."
Salabarria
said he thinks social issues and immigration will eventually become
non-issues, because the Republican Party will evolve.
And,
he pointed out that even though Trump is monopolizing the spotlight
with his immigration agenda, there are other GOP candidates with more
moderate immigration ideas
that appeal to him, specifically former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush.
Trump's Problem — And Influence
To
be clear — the crux of the frustration for essentially every Latino
Republican interviewed for this story was not the GOP presidential field
in its entirety; but, specifically,
Trump, his immigration ideologies, and his power to dominate (and
influence) the conversation.
"It's
disappointing what's going on with the party right now," said Tom
Narvaez, a 23-year-old law student from Virginia, whose parents
immigrated from El Salvador. "If
you want to win over the Latino community, you have to respect them.
And, I think that's what some of the candidates are failing to do."
Narvaez
is a committed Republican. He interned for former House Majority Leader
Eric Cantor and volunteered for Mitt Romney's 2012 campaign, but he
said the immigration
rhetoric in this campaign, especially from Trump, is "insulting."
The other night, he even tweeted at the RNC Chairman Reince Priebus to express his exasperation with the situation.
Narvaez is disappointed, because, he said, it seems so few candidates are taking the issue of immigration seriously.
"Out
of all the candidates right now, I think Marco Rubio is the only one
that has a record of actually trying to move forward with immigration,"
Narvaez said.
Rubio worked on the Senate's bipartisan comprehensive immigration bill, but has not championed it on the campaign trail.
Narvaez
is a Republican, he said, because he believes deeply in small
government. He said, personally, he's not going to be swayed to the left
by immigration chatter from
the fringe, but he's worried the party could get a bad reputation.
Appeal 'Narrowing'
Trump
likes to say that Hispanics love him. But the data tell a different
story. Trump is hugely unpopular with Latino voters of all political
stripes.
A
Gallup poll released last week showed two-thirds — 65 percent — of
Latino voters have an unfavorable opinion of the
real-estate-mogul-turned-GOP-front-runner. Only 14
percent had a favorable opinion of him.
Keep
in mind, the poll was conducted before a Trump security guard kicked
Univision's Jorge Ramos out of his press conference in Iowa.
Immigration
is important to many Latino voters on both sides of the aisle, said
Alfonso Aguilar, the former chief of the U.S. Office of Citizenship
under George W. Bush.
He now serves as executive director of the Latino Partnership at the
conservative American Principles Project.
Aguilar explained that immigration may not be the top priority for Latinos in political polls, but it's a "gateway" issue.
"It's
an issue you have to get right," he said. "It doesn't mean that you
have to believe in mass amnesty or a path to citizenship. You just have
to show that you're constructive,
that you're willing to, in an intelligent way, bring people out of the
shadows, even if it's not a special path to citizenship."
Aguilar
said Latinos are watching how candidates respond to Trump. He said some
Republican presidential hopefuls — such as Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker,
retired neurosurgeon
Ben Carson, and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, who have tried to match Trump's
staunch immigration rhetoric, have probably already lost Latino votes.
And, other candidates, who've remained silent, probably haven't done themselves any favors.
"The
spectrum of candidates that have potential to be appealing to Latinos,
it's narrowing," Aguilar said. "I think really we're almost down to
Governor Bush, Marco Rubio,
Carly Fiorina and Governor Perry, and some of those are not viable. So,
you know, that's part of the Trump effect."
The "Trump effect," Aguilar said, makes it harder to attract Latino voters.
"Democrats," he added, "they love this."
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