AP
By Nicholas Riccardi
February 23, 2016
Nevada Republicans thought they had put their immigration problems behind them.
After
Sen. Harry Reid held onto his seat in 2010 by defending immigrants'
rights and in 2012 President Barack Obama handily won a state that is
only 52 percent white,
the state's Republicans backed off their hardline stance on illegal
immigration. The state party called for citizenship for people living in
the country illegally, Republicans fell in line behind their popular
Hispanic governor, Brian Sandoval, and the GOP
swept the 2014 elections while hardly discussing the issue.
But
now that detente is over. With elected officials in the state feuding
over immigration and the party's presidential contest in town, passions
are raging once again
and raising the specter that the party will never resolve the issue
even where it is essential for its political survival.
"There
is a backlash in general against people who break the law and get away
with it," said Assemblyman Ira Hansen, a supporter of Sen. Ted Cruz.
"Nevada is very much
a microcosm of what's happened nationally," he added — elite
Republicans turned dovish on immigration, "and that conflicts with the
rank and file....That's why Trump has taken off so well."
Nevada's
economy depends on a steady flow of overseas tourists. It is 28 percent
Latino, 9 percent Asian-American and leads the nation with the highest
rate of people
living in the country illegally, according to the Pew Hispanic Center.
Its immigrant communities — 19 percent of its population was born
outside the United States — have helped turn a once reliably Republican
state in presidential elections into one that backed
Obama twice. Many analysts attribute that to hardline Republican
positions on immigration.
"We
seem overwhelmed by the other side because the other side is a lot more
vocal," Fernando Romero, of the nonpartisan Las Vegas group Hispanics
in Politics, said.
Romero
singled out Trump and Cruz as the most vocal of the GOP presidential
contenders. "Unfortunately, those two individuals are doing so much to
create that tension
and that skepticism that those who maybe have never voted before or
that are now becoming U.S. citizens . are leaning toward whoever the
Democratic candidate would be."
On
Monday evening, Trump was introduced at a heavily attended rally by Joe
Arpaio, the Arizona Sheriff who is synonymous with heated
anti-immigration rhetoric. Shortly
after Trump took to the stage in an arena in a Las Vegas hotel, his
supporters burst into a throaty chant.
"Build
that wall! Build that wall!" they shouted - a reference to Trump's plan
to build a wall along the length of the Southern border to stop illegal
immigration.
"We're going to build the wall. And whose going to pay for that wall?" asked Trump.
"Mexico!" shouted the crowd in response.
"They think we're kidding, too, don't they folks, huh? We're not kidding," added Trump.
"We're not going to be the dummies, anymore folks. We're going to be the smart ones," the GOP front-runner said.
Cruz
only treads lightly on immigration in his campaign speeches, but the
mention drew the biggest cheers during his appearance outside a sports
bar in a rural town 60
miles west of Las Vegas. "We need to finally, finally, finally secure
the borders and end sanctuary cities," he said, speaking to a crowd of
several hundred from the bed of a black pickup truck.
Immigration
was also the reason many Cruz supporters were opposed to Sen. Marco
Rubio, who helped write a bill that would have eventually granted
citizenship to many of
the 11 million people in the U.S. illegally.
"Anytime
you do anything with Chuck Schumer and Harry Reid, that goes against my
philosophy," said Ed Horn, 67, a retired air-traffic controller who has
switched his allegiance
from Trump to Cruz. "I believe he's going to shut the borders down and
be more for legalized immigration, maybe slow it down until our economy
comes back."
Immigration
critics contend they can win Nevada's diverse voters. They point to
people like Mario Sevilla, a legal immigrant from Mexico who lives in
Las Vegas and ardently
backs Cruz. "Rubio was in that Gang of Eight — that's like an anchor,"
Sevilla said. "You lock your doors at night. I can't get angry at white
people" for opposing illegal immigration, he added. "We've got laws."
But
Andres Ramirez, a Democratic strategist here, says Republicans are
getting boxed in by Trump and, to a lesser extent, Cruz. "We have tea
party folks here and we have
anti-immigrant folks here in Nevada, but they're not the dominant
voice," Ramirez said. "But the fact that the (state Republicans) are
having to take sides with or condone the stances of their national
standard bearers creates a problem."
The
division in the state pre-dates the presidential contest. Attorney
General Adam Laxalt, who was elected in the GOP wave of 2014, clashed
with Sandoval over the attorney
general joining a lawsuit to overturn Obama's executive action limiting
deportations, which is very popular in the state's Latino community.
Laxalt
has endorsed Cruz while most of the rest of the state's GOP elite is
backing Rubio. Laxalt's top political strategist, Robert Uithoven, is
running Cruz's Nevada
campaign.
Uithoven
said Republican base discontent is less about immigration and more
about GOP politicians not staying true to their conservative principles.
He tied the immigration
dispute to another divide with Sandoval, who pushed through and signed
the largest tax increase in state history last year after Republicans
won control of the state legislature.
"This divide between the ruling class and the grass roots doesn't just exist in Ted Cruz's mind," Uithoven said.
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