Los Angeles Times
By George Skelton
January 28, 2016
California long has been considered a trendsetter. And right now, that should be worrying the Republican Party.
Things often happen here first. Auto smog controls. Taxpayer rebellion. The fight against climate change.
California also is where the Republican Party virtually destroyed itself by scaring Latinos while bashing illegal immigration.
Like GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump has been doing.
One
of his main rivals, Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, sounds almost as insulting.
And none of the party's White House wannabes is exactly Reaganesque.
This
is what Ronald Reagan — the revered Republican icon — had to say about
Mexican migrants during a 1980 primary debate with George H.W. Bush:
"Rather
than talking about putting up a fence, [we should] make it possible
[for Mexicans] to come here legally. … It's the only safety valve right
now they
have with [their high] unemployment."
Reagan
and Bush had been asked by someone in the audience whether the children
of "illegal aliens" should be allowed to attend public schools. Bush
answered
first:
"If
those people are here," he said, they should "get what their neighbors
get." He added: "These are honorable, decent, family-loving people....
Good people,
strong people, part of our family" and making their "6- to 8-year-old
kids totally uneducated" is wrong.
That
portrait is the opposite of the one Trump painted of Mexicans migrating
illegally. "Rapists," drug dealers and violent criminals, he called
them last
year, adding that only "some, I assume, are good people."
"I
can't imagine Trump giving an inaugural speech," says Ken Khachigian, a
longtime GOP strategist who wrote Reagan's first swearing-in address.
"I can't place
him there, putting that mantle of dignity on him, looking out over
those monuments."
As
president, Reagan signed legislation granting amnesty to immigrants
here illegally. These days, Republican presidential candidates consider
"amnesty" a
dirty word.
They, especially Trump, are making the old California GOP rhetoric sound like a Sunday sermon.
While
running for reelection in 1994, Republican Gov. Pete Wilson crusaded
for Proposition 187, which denied most government services — including
schooling
— to immigrants here illegally. Voters passed the measure
overwhelmingly. But the federal courts later ruled it unconstitutional.
The
ugliest part of the pro-187 campaign was a TV ad that showed grainy
news footage of a group of people running north across a U.S.-Mexico
border checkpoint.
It proclaimed in a doomsday, Darth Vader tone: "They keep coming."
Yes,
they did. Straight to the voter registrar — at least their citizen
cousins and sisters did. And they turned against Republicans.
Since
1994, more than 3 million Latinos have been added to the voter rolls,
according to Paul Mitchell, vice president of Political Data Inc.
Latinos
make up 23% of the California electorate. And their share will only
climb. They now account for roughly 40% of the population. As voters,
Mitchell
says, they're aligned 54% Democrat, 24% independent, 17% Republican.
"Although
many were probably only 6 or 8 years old when Prop. 187 passed,"
Mitchell says, "it still lingers with them, as well as with people who
weren't even
born then."
California
has basically changed its 1990s view: A poll released Wednesday by the
Public Policy Institute of California found that 78% of likely voters
believe
people here illegally should be allowed to stay "if certain
requirements are met"; 61% consider immigrants a benefit to the state.
It
might seem preposterous to think that the Republican Party nationally
could be sent tumbling downhill by rhetoric insensitive to Latinos,
especially given
its strong control of Congress and domination of statehouses.
But
consider this: 22 years ago, California reelected a Republican governor
and chose GOP candidates for four of its other six statewide partisan
offices.
Republicans also won a slim majority in the state Assembly. Today, no
statewide elected official is a Republican. And Democrats outnumber the
GOP nearly 2 to 1 in each legislative house.
During
a 40-year stretch of presidential elections, Republicans carried
California nine out of 10 times. But since 1992, we have been solidly
blue.
In
1994, Republicans were 37% of the registered voters. Today they're 28%.
Democrats also have fallen, from 49% to 43%. Independents have gained
the most,
from 10% to 23%, largely among young Latinos.
The
GOP should be especially leery of following California's path in
western states — particularly in Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado
and Texas — where
Latino populations are growing.
"If Republicans aren't careful," says veteran GOP consultant Rob Stutzman, "they could essentially lose the entire West."
"Texas
is going to go from a red state to a blue state in the next 10 years,"
predicts Stu Spencer, Reagan's top political strategist. "Look at the
numbers."
To
the California GOP's credit, its candidates have significantly tempered
their anti-illegal immigration demagoguery in the last five years. And
they have
tried to lay off the social issues — principally abortion — that turned
many libertarian-minded Californians against them.
But
now comes Trump, who also has bellowed about barring all Muslims from
entering the country. Not just terrorists, but anyone of that religion.
"It's
the height of constitutional absurdity," Stutzman says. "Unless Trump
is broadly condemned by the party, he could have a hugely damaging
effect."
Mike
Madrid, the grandson of Mexican immigrants who is a Republican
consultant, puts it this way: "The party that began with Lincoln may end
with Trump. That
would be a sad American story."
If there's any California trend that Republicans nationally should follow, it's the recent calming of rhetoric.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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