AP
By Julie Pace and Bill Barrow
August 28, 2015
Donald
Trump has exposed anew the deep rift inside the Republican Party on
immigration, a break between its past and the country's future that the
party itself has said
it must bridge if the GOP ever hopes to win back the White House.
As
they headed into the 2016 election, Republicans thought they had a
strategy for moving past their immigration woes. Outlined in a so-called
"autopsy" of 2012 nominee
Mitt Romney's loss to President Barack Obama, it called for passing
"comprehensive immigration reform" — shorthand for resolving the status
of the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally.
Those
plans ran aground in the GOP-controlled House, falling victim to the
passionate opposition among conservatives to anything they deem
"amnesty" for such immigrants.
Some
Republicans then hoped candidates with more moderate positions on
immigration — such as Jeb Bush, the Spanish-speaking former Florida
governor, or Sen. Marco Rubio,
a Miami native and son of Cuban parents — would rise during the 2016
campaign and boost the party's appeal to Hispanic voters.
Instead,
it's Trump — with his call to deport everyone living in the U.S.
illegally and eliminate birthright citizenship — who has surged to the
top of the summertime
polls, reinforcing the lasting power of white, conservative voters who
the GOP has courted for decades and continue to dominate the party's
presidential primaries.
"Donald
Trump is telling the truth and people don't always like that," Donald
Kidd, a 73-year-old retired pipe welder from Mobile, Alabama, said at a
weekend rally for
Trump.
Kidd
added that Trump was "like George Wallace," the former Alabama governor
and presidential candidate known for his outspoken conservative
rhetoric and segregationist
views.
Trump's
growing support appears to have pushed some of his rivals to match his
hard-line positions on immigration. Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and Wisconsin
Gov. Scott Walker
quickly echoed Trump's call for ending birthright citizenship. While
Walker later backed off, Cruz has refused to join with those who
criticized Trump after he called immigrants from Mexico rapists and
criminals.
On Thursday, Cruz and Trump announced plans to appear together at a rally next month in Washington.
"Other
campaigns should look at incorporating what he's saying," said South
Carolina Rep. Jeff Duncan, who represents the most Republican
congressional district in the
early-voting state. He said he doesn't know how Trump's proposals are
playing with Hispanics, but said his message "resonates with average
Americans."
Trump
mixes his boasts on immigration, including his pledge to build a
"beautiful" wall on the nation's Southern border to stop illegal
crossings, with talk about how
he'll focus on jobs if elected president, which would be a boon for
minorities who endure higher rates of unemployment. But Ferrel Guillory,
a longtime political observer at the University of North Carolina, said
it is rhetoric that nonetheless "signals to
white voters, especially through the immigration issue."
The
billionaire businessman has frequently referred to his supporters as
the "silent majority," a phrase used by Richard Nixon as part of his
"Southern strategy" to bolster
support from working class white voters in the 1968 and 1972 elections.
At a news conference in South Carolina on Thursday, Trump brushed aside
questions about the term's loaded history.
"I'm
just bringing it to modern day," he said, arguing that his backers are
"a silent majority in this country that feels abused, that feels
forgotten, that feels mistreated
... that wants the country to have victories again."
For
decades, Republicans sank their presidential hopes into winning over
white working- and middle-class voters. But as the country grows
increasingly diverse, winning
the majority of white voters — which may yield victories in the GOP
primaries — is no longer enough to power a candidate to success in the
general election.
That
was the stark lesson for Republicans in 2012. GOP nominee Mitt Romney
won 59 percent of the white vote in the general election, but garnered
just 27 percent from
Hispanics, 26 percent from Asians and 6 percent from black voters.
It
was the worst performance from a Republican candidate among Hispanic
voters in a decade, and Obama swept every competitive state in the
nation save North Carolina.
That's
undoubtedly why Hillary Rodham Clinton, the front-runner for the
Democratic nomination, has argued that there's little difference between
Trump and the other GOP
candidates on immigration. And why Bush, who is married to a Mexican
woman and famously said Republican candidates for president must be
willing to risk losing in the primaries if they hope to win in the
general election, has been among his sharpest critics.
"He's
appealing to people's angst and their anger," Bush said this week. "I
want to solve problems so we can fix this and turn immigration into what
it's always been —
an economic driver for our country."
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