In fact,
contrary to
much of the
pundit
chatter, a
drama is
playing out
this fall
that may
doom
Republicans
to permanent
minority
status in
America.
The passage
of the
Arizona
"papers,
please"
anti-immigration
law has
forced
Republican
politicians
around the
country into
a political
box canyon
that does
not offer an
easy escape.
For fear of
offending
the emergent
Tea Party
and other
anti-immigrant
zealots in
their own
base
they are
precipitating
a massive
realignment
of Hispanic
voters
nationwide.
According to
data
released by
Public
Policy
Polling
(PPP), Texas
Governor
Rick Perry
has lost his
early lead
over
Democratic
challenger
Bill White
and the race
is now tied.
The movement
from a
previous PPP
poll in
February
comes
entirely
from
Hispanic
voters.
PPP reports
that:
"With white
voters Perry
led 54-36
then and
leads 55-35
now. With
black voters
White led
81-12 then
and 70 -7
now. But
with
Hispanics
Perry has
gone from
leading
53-41 to
trailing
55-21....there
is no doubt
the Arizona
immigration
bill is
popular
nationally.
But if it
causes
Hispanics to
change their
voting
behavior
without a
parallel
shift among
whites then
it's going
to end up
playing to
Democratic
advantage
this fall."
The punditry
sometimes
forgets in
politics
intensity is
often just
as important
as poll
percentages.
For many
Hispanic
voters, the
Arizona
immigration
law is an
insult. It
is an attack
on their
very
identity.
And it is
certainly a
litmus test
that tells a
Hispanic
voter
whether or
not a
political
candidate is
on their
side
the critical
threshold
test of
voter
decision
making.
The same is
simply not
true for
non-Hispanic
voters. As a
result, by
allowing the
Party to be
defined by
the
anti-immigrant
zealots
and refusing
to lift a
finger to
pass
comprehensive
immigration
reform in
Congress
the
Republicans
are playing
with
political
fire.
In fact,
given the
fact
Hispanics
are the
fastest-growing
segment of
the American
electorate,
the
Republicans
are playing
with
permanent
marginality.
As if to
sharpen
their
anti-immigrant
brand, last
week the
Texas
Republican
State
Convention
voted for a
platform
that
included a
plank
calling on
the state
government
to adopt a
state law
like the one
in Arizona.
But Texas is
far from the
only place
where the
emerging
Hispanic
backlash is
in evidence.
PPP reports
its latest
polls in
Colorado
show
incumbent
Democratic
Senator
Michael
Bennett has
gone from
tying his
opponent
Republican
Jane Norton
to a
three-point
lead largely
because his
lead among
Hispanic
voters has
soared from
12 to 21
points.
California
Republican
gubernatorial
candidate
Meg Whitman
felt
compelled to
back tough
anti-immigrant
measures to
get the
Republican
nomination.
Now her
support
among
Hispanics is
hemorrhaging,
dropping
from 35 to
26 points
from March
to May.
Since the
primary,
Whitman has
begun to
waffle on
her tough
anti-immigrant
stand but
the damage
has been
done
what's more,
it's
memorialized
in videos
that
Democrat
Jerry Brown
is sure to
loop over
and over on
Spanish
language TV.
Even in
districts
where the
Hispanic
vote is not
large, big
declines in
Republican
support
could prove
decisive in
otherwise
close races.
After all
the
difference
between
getting
49.9% and
51.1% means
everything
in an
election.
The bottom
line is by
passing the
Arizona
"papers,
please" law,
Republicans
especially
in the West
have
awakened a
sleeping and
growing
giant.
Remember the
huge drops
in Hispanic
support for
Republicans
do not
factor in
the effect
the Arizona
law will
have on
Hispanic
turnout.
A few months
ago, no one
would have
predicted a
massive
turnout in
November
among
Hispanic
voters. That
appears to
have
changed.
If a surge
of
anti-Republican
Hispanic
voters
destroys the
careers of
enough
politicians
who thought
pandering to
anti-immigrant
fear was
good
politics,
the whole
political
narrative
about
immigration
reform will
change.
Watch for
big sections
of the
Republican
establishment
to fall all
over
themselves
to make
amends to
the rising
tide of
Hispanic
voters, soon
after the
elections.
But in all
likelihood
it will be
very
difficult to
get the
anti-immigrant
toothpaste
back into
the tube.
If it
continues to
pursue its
current
course, the
Republican
Party may
find it
loses
another
ethnic
minority the
same way it
lost African
Americans
two
generations
ago. African
Americans
recall, were
a solid part
of the
Republican
base from
the Civil
War through
the early
part of the
20th
Century.
Roosevelt's
New Deal
began to
change that.
The civil
rights
revolution
and the
Republican
"Southern
Strategy"
completed
it. Now 92%
to 95% of
African
Americans
vote
Democratic.
The problem
is you can
only get
shut out of
a couple of
minorities
and before
you know it,
you are no
longer
competitive
with the
majority of
Americans.
Within just
a few years
minorities
will become
a majority
of the
American
electorate.
And let's
remember
Republicans
are also
having
enormous
difficulty
competing
for young
white
millennial
voters that
are forming
their voting
habits at
this moment.
That may
very well
mean that
the decision
to write off
Hispanics
may turn out
to be a
fatal error
for the
future of
Republicans
as a
national
party.
Hispanic
voters could
have been a
political
lifeboat for
Republicans.
No longer.
And of
course the
irony is
that some of
the more
enlightened
elements of
the
Republican
Party who
have
justified
risking
long-term
popularity
with
Hispanics in
exchange for
short-term
political
gains
may not even
see benefits
in the short
run.
For some
years,
Hispanic
immigration
rights
marchers
have carried
signs
reading:
"Today We
March,
Tomorrow We
Vote."
Tomorrow may
have
arrived.