The Hill
By Alexander Bolton
August 20, 2015
The
ghost of Mitt Romney’s failed 2012 presidential election campaign is
haunting Republicans when it comes to Donald Trump’s immigration plan.
Trump’s
proposals to end birthright citizenship while rounding up and deporting
undocumented immigrants reminds many Republicans of Romney’s call for
illegal immigrants
to self-deport.
Sen. Lindsey Graham (S.C.) told reporters on Monday that Trump’s proposal is “going to kill the Republican Party.”
“That’s self-deportation on steroids,” he said.
Sen.
Jeff Flake (Ariz.), who along with Graham was one of the Republican
co-authors of the comprehensive immigration reform bill that passed the
Senate in 2013, called
Trump’s proposal “simply unrealistic.”
“Not
only would its costs run into the hundreds of billions of dollars, it
would devastate the economies of states that rely on billions of dollars
annually from cross-border
trade, including Arizona, Texas and California,” he said in a statement
to The Hill.
Republicans
believe Romney hurt himself by moving to the right in the 2012 primary
on immigration. In the general election, President Obama won 71 percent
of the Hispanic
vote according to some exit polls, significantly contributing to
Romney’s loss.
Now
the GOP is worried something similar is happening with Trump as rivals
to the GOP frontrunner begin adopting some of his immigration rhetoric.
It
has set off alarm bells among GOP lawmakers and strategists,
particularly among former advisers to Romney who vividly remember his
problems with Hispanic voters.
Eric
Fehrnstrom, a former senior advisor to Romney, tweeted Tuesday that
“Trump’s immigration plan is a Punji stake pit for other candidates.
They should not fall into
the trap of looking like they oppose reform.”
Katie Packer Gage, a deputy campaign manager for Romney, told CNN that Republican candidates need to be careful.
“This
is an issue that I think Republican candidates have to be very careful
about. I don’t think that the majority of the American people are ready
to repeal the 14th Amendment
and say children born in this country are not citizens,” she said.
Vin
Weber, a GOP strategist and former senior advisor to Romney’s 2012
White House bid, said voters don’t currently see Trump as speaking for
the GOP but worries that
will change if he continues to dominate the polls.
“The
longer that he remains in the front-runner status and if he can
solidify for the time being that role and the more other candidates move
toward his positions, the
more this is going to be become the Republican position,” he said. “I’m
very concerned about it.
Trump
has proposed building a permanent wall along the 1,900-mile
U.S.-Mexican border, tripling the number of Immigration and Customs
Enforcement officers, implementing
a nationwide e-verify system and increasing penalties for people who
overstay their visas.
The
business mogul’s tough talk on illegal immigration has struck a nerve
with many Republican voters, and he is riding high in polls.
Many in the GOP believe that will put pressure on other Republican candidates to move toward Trump’s rhetoric.
Sen.
Ted Cruz (R-Texas) said Wednesday that he “absolutely” supports
changing the 14th amendment to end birthright citizenship, saying that
“we should end granting automatic
birthright citizenship to the children of those who are here
illegally.”
Wisconsin
Gov. Scott Walker, who has seen Trump overtake him in polls in Iowa,
said much of what Trump is proposing is “similar to the things I’ve
mentioned.”
Louisiana
Gov. Bobby Jindal, who is near the bottom of the pack of presidential
hopefuls, has embraced Trump’s call to end birthright citizenship for
the children of illegal
immigrants.
Even
Graham, who has frequently battled with Trump and says most of his plan
is unworkable, offered support for ending birthright citizenship.
“I think it's a bad practice to give citizenship based on birth,” he told CNN’s “The Situation Room.”
“We
have evidence of people buying tourist visas for the express purpose of
coming over here and having a child. I don't think that's a good idea,”
he said.
A
study put out by the Republican National Committee after the last
presidential election concluded the GOP needed to change how it engages
with Hispanics, who make up
a sizable share of the vote in three swing states — Colorado, Florida
and Nevada — that could decide which party controls the White House as
well as the Senate in 2017.
Latinos
made up 17 percent of eligible voters in Florida 2014, 16 percent in
Nevada and 14 percent in Colorado. Hispanics account for nearly five
percent of eligible voters
in Virginia, another presidential target state.
“It’s
essential that be competitive with that community,” Weber said. “There
are competing theories in the Republican Party. One is that we need to
be more competitive
with Hispanic voters, young voters and women — particularly Hispanic
voters.”
“There’s
a competing theory that says we need to increase our percentage and
turnout among the traditional white base of the Republican Party. My
view is that’s like being
asked to the last dance on the Titanic,” he added.
Alfonso
Aguilar, a former Bush administration official and executive director
of the American Principles Project’s Latino Partnership, says Walker
could be the “biggest
loser.”
“Scott
Walker by embracing the proposal to end birthright citizenship, he’s
done with Latino voters,” said Aguilar. “And I think that’s going to
affect him with donors
as well.
“He had his self-deportation moment,” he added.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment