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Why anti-immigration conservatives fell flat in 2006
Reason magazine ^ | February 2007 | David Weigel

Posted on 01/27/2007 8:55:29 AM PST by spintreebob

Former congressional candidate Vernon Robinson sounds resigned, and more than a little tired, when you ask him to explain his defeat. "The 2006 election was not a referendum on immigration," he says. "I would have liked it to be, but it didn't happen."

That's an understatement. In the tumultuous political year of 2006, Robinson, a former city councilman from Winston-Salem, North Carolina, became one of the country's most notorious voices for a crackdown on illegal immigration. In March, as the Republican-led House of Representatives wrestled with a harsh reform bill that would build a wall on the border and classify crossers as felons, Robinson's campaign launched a TV ad that opened with the theme from The Twilight Zone and Rod Serling-style narration: "If you're a conservative Republican, watching the news these days can make you feel as though you're in the Twilight Zone....The aliens are here, but they didn't come in a spaceship. They came across our unguarded Mexican border by the millions."

The ad was a sensation. For everyone who saw it in North Carolina's 13th District, where Robinson was challenging Democratic Rep. Brad Miller, dozens more saw it on YouTube and on blogs that trafficked the ad across the Web. "This is tough," Hardball host Chris Matthews swooned, re-running the ad on his MSNBC chat fest. "It's strong, it makes fun of the other side viciously, but I remember it. I'm going to remember this ad."

Robinson, who had already alienated Republican allies like Jack Kemp with his approach to immigration, issued more commercials blasting the Democrat for voting against a border wall or a cutoff on benefits for undocumented workers. One radio ad set Miller-bashing lyrics to the Beverly Hillbillies theme ("Come and hear me tell about a politician named Brad. He gave illegal aliens everything we had!"). The Democrats were spooked, even before the influential political magazine Congressional Quarterly pondered the tone of the campaign and increased its odds for a Robinson upset.

"Both myself and my opponent thought it was going to be a photo finish," Robinson remembers. "He wouldn't have stood in rain for two hours on Election Day if he thought it wouldn't be close."

If so, both men were wrong. The Democrat, who had won 59 percent of the vote in 2004, thumped the well-funded Robinson by 28 points. After a year in which the immigration issue inspired reform bills, citizen border patrols, mass marches of undocumented workers, and untold hours of talk show screaming, a candidate who had seemed to strike a hidden chord with voters lost in a rout.

It's not a new thing for the media to misread the mood of the country on a hot issue. But the crumbling of the immigration backlash was almost without precedent. Poll after poll showed voters angry about the influx of Mexican workers and willing to do almost anything to stop it. A much-cited April survey by Rasmussen Reports showed a whopping 30 percent of voters ready to elect a third-party presidential candidate who "promised to build a barrier along the Mexican border and make enforcement of immigration law his top priority." Politicians, who like to pretend they ignore the polls and lead with their guts, were clearly sweating that datum.

In April, Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean declared that Republicans would wield the immigration issue the way "they used gay marriage" in 2004-tossing a banana peel on the floor and waiting for Democrats to walk on by. Lo and behold, the GOP did. Pennsylvania Sen. Rick Santorum papered the state with stickers announcing Democrat Bob Casey's support for immigrant amnesty: "13 Million Illegal Aliens Are Counting on Him." He also campaigned with the mayor of Hazelton, who was pushing a town law that would fine landlords or employers who dealt with illegal immigrants.

Casey drubbed Santorum by 18 points. In Luzerne County, where Hazelton is located, he beat him by 21 points. But that result didn't shock like the fate of Arizona's J.D. Hayworth and Randy Graf. Hayworth, who'd opposed a harsh immigration state ballot measure in 2004, entered the campaign with the publication of an anti-immigration book called Whatever It Takes. Readers who flipped past the cover photo of Hayworth hanging tough in front of the border fence got to read the congressman's thoughts on dispatching troops to the country's southern flank and quashing Mexico's secret desire to reconquer the Southwest.

Graf, who was running for the seat of immigration moderate (and fellow Republican) Jim Kolbe, got financial support from the border-patrolling Minuteman project. Both men lost congressional seats in districts that had twice voted for George W. Bush.

Those losses, lined up next to each other like evidence at a trial, look like they debunk the immigration hype. But it's no use getting a Republican to admit that the issue didn't go the hard-liners' way. It wasn't that voters didn't want to close the border, the hard-liners assert, it was that voters who wanted to do that were distracted by anger over the war in Iraq and other issues, and voted for Democrats anyway.

"Immigration was a winning issue," says National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Ed Petru. "You wouldn't have seen so many ads on it if our candidates weren't on the winning side of the immigration issue. It helped stress the contrast between our candidates and the Democrats who favored amnesty. But having a winning issue is not the same as having an issue that can compensate for all the disadvantages our candidates had this cycle."

You'll hear the same tune from the candidates themselves. "The Democrats did a good job of nationalizing the war in Iraq and national sentiment against Congress," says Graf. "The sixth year of a presidency is historically not a good year for the party in the majority. We had a late primary and an eight-week general election. Between that and the party unity I didn't have on my side, it was just not going to go our way."

In other words, the hard-liners have a bucket of red herrings. Epochal issues can change an electorate's mood or historical patterns; eight years ago, anger over the drawn-out impeachment of Bill Clinton inspired voters to add more Democrats to Congress, despite the "rule" of the sixth-year slump. If a serious border crackdown and a Mexican Wall were really burning up American passions, they would have moved voters to action.

Some hard-liners argue they were moved. "The same voters who opposed Graf and Hayworth overwhelmingly approved four get-tough ballot measures," says Mark Krikorian, the executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies and a border hawk.

But those referenda didn't comport with the hard-line approach. One made English the official language of Arizona, a measure beloved not just by the anti-immigration crowd but by many pro-immigration pundits who think it will encourage assimilation. The other three initiatives cut off free social services for noncitizens, more in line with the harshness hard-liners expected from voters but a far cry from the "kick 'em out, build a wall" attitude they claimed to be riding to victory.

The idea that Americans might be more compassionate about immigrants than they let on is a tough one for hard-liners to comprehend. Most Americans, though eager to exercise some control over the border, don't see their would-be fellow citizens as a menace. Immigration hawks who look at those huddled masses and choose to see an ugly threat will keep getting the same results they got this year. They'll lose.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 2006; 2006election; aliens; election; illegalimmigration; illegals; immigrantlist; immigration; tancredo
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To: mthom
Of course those were major issues, for the left.

There are two important points on immigration.
First, it didn't save anyone
Second it came into play in only about 15 races and the GOP lost most of those.

The general public may have been slow to get there, for several good reasons, but they are well informed on immigration as well as other issues that are dear to the far right. If you look at Hayworth's TV ad where he is spittin' and snarlin' the immigration and Mexico totalization mis-info, he sounds just like one of the kooks at FR.

The residents of Scottsdale are not ignorant and they have common sense also. They didn't buy it.

241 posted on 01/29/2007 1:28:01 PM PST by Ben Ficklin
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To: NapkinUser
As the memo and the polling shows, the voters want enforcement(as in the strong support for the referendums) and reform.

Hayworth went with enforcement only, and lost.

242 posted on 01/29/2007 1:33:42 PM PST by Ben Ficklin
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To: CharlesWayneCT
"This causes some trouble. We can't deport them all to either country, as neither country will take the other parent. Neither country really wants the american citizens either. The two have NO family in either country of origin, no place to live, no place to go to. "

Tough. Their home and business are fruits of the poisoned tree. There's an old expression: "hard cases make bad law". There are thousands of sob stories over taxes - if not millions. I don't see the government not enforcing the tax code because of them.

A national ID card will only be imposed against citizens and legal residents. What's more, it WILL be faked.

"Your plan for these people is simple -- even though they have paid their taxes, learned our language, and assimilated into our society, you must kick them out -- no exceptions. There are other people waiting in line that you would much rather have in the country than these people. "

Yes. That is the law. They (legals) do us the courtesy of ASKING to be let in and complying with our laws. Your example family did not. It's not as if they hasn't been a series of rolling amnesties ever since the 80s....
243 posted on 01/29/2007 5:51:21 PM PST by EnochPowellWasRight
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To: EnochPowellWasRight

She's such an idiot. Maybe she should resign just for that. The Karen from last year would never have resigned in a crisis just to protect her husband from a weasel.


244 posted on 01/29/2007 6:32:35 PM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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To: CharlesWayneCT

Oops, wrong thread. back to the 24 live thread.


245 posted on 01/29/2007 6:33:17 PM PST by CharlesWayneCT
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To: haplesswanderer

wanderer,
Are you referring to me as "moderate" ?

The simple fact is that a big government, expensive, anti-free market response to immigration is not conservative. Population control rhetoric dominates the anti-immigration movement. This turns off social conservatives.

Trying to wrap anti-immigration in the label "conservative" does not make it so.


246 posted on 01/30/2007 4:28:14 PM PST by spintreebob
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To: mo

Rove was against the NRCC TV ads from what I hear. The house hired their own professional consultants to develop the ads. Those consultants should refund their consulting fees.

It is NOT in the interest of corporate America to support any mean-spiritedness. It is in their best interest to allow the free market to rule with no labeling of workers as "illegal". It is also in their interest for immigration to separate out terrorists, welfare parasites and truly bad people from the ordinary workers.


247 posted on 01/30/2007 4:32:58 PM PST by spintreebob
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To: La Enchiladita
What' wrong with wire transfers? My grandfather did the same thing! Besides, Wal Mart and Mickey D's would lose alot of business if it weren't for the Mexicans! ;-)

Nevertheless, the concern about "wire transfers" is RETARDED! We don't live in a "zero sum" economy, despite what populist retards like Lou Dobbs think.

Let's face it: the ONLY people who care about illegal immigration as their main issue are CONSERVATIVES. Most swing voters either shrug or don't give a sh-t. It doesn't help that the only folks who show up at anti-illegal rallies are a bunch of pot bellied, ball cap wearing, American Splendor reject.

248 posted on 01/30/2007 4:36:58 PM PST by Clemenza (NO to Rudy in 2008! The politics of Rockefeller and the attitude of a Gambino.)
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To: spintreebob

What you just posted, summarized: "Real" conservatives are stupid, dishonest and out of touch with reality. Yep. Sounds about right.


249 posted on 01/30/2007 4:44:27 PM PST by Wolfstar ("A nation that hates its Horatios is already in grave danger of losing its soul." Dr. Jack Wheeler)
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To: spintreebob

It is in corporate interests, however, to continue to have access to a "disposable" worker pool....effective border management interferes with that goal. Effective anti-illegal immigration politics , from that perspective, is contrary to their interests. The best way to derail an anti-illegal immigration politician is to label him anti-immigrant.(or, for that matter, an anti-illegal immigration party)


250 posted on 01/30/2007 7:06:34 PM PST by mo
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To: Clemenza
...the ONLY people who care about illegal immigration as their main issue are CONSERVATIVES.

Such as Senator Tom Coburn, who has been outstanding in fighting illegal immigration.

It doesn't help that the only folks who show up at anti-illegal rallies are a bunch of pot bellied, ball cap wearing, American Splendor reject.

What was the date and location of this event you witnessed? Would the above be your description of James Sensenbrenner, the Congressman who co-sponsored HR4437? Would it be your description of FReepers who showed up to rally in support of the Minuteman caravan last Summer?

Besides, who DOESN'T wear a ball cap these days and who has an absolutely flat abdomen? Would that fit the description of "small 'l' libertarians" such as yourself?

251 posted on 01/30/2007 7:25:04 PM PST by La Enchiladita (People get ready . . .)
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To: All

LOL... I've been to some anti-illegal rallies that have had people who are extremely well trained & physically fit. Didn't realize that people who went to rallies needed to fit the Cosmo & GQ perfect image that the media likes to portray. Rather than criticizing the people who actually get up and go to rallies, why not talk about those who don't care that there is an enormous number of Americans who have been harmed by the criminals who pass through the nation's open borders. There are many unnamed victims who have been killed, raped, robbed, crippled and otherwise personally violated. It is particularly shocking that even in post-911 America, the government still refuses to protect the people in the most basic ways from the world's terrorists and criminals who enter at will to do as they please.


252 posted on 02/04/2007 12:28:53 AM PST by haplesswanderer (Tomorrow belongs to us.)
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To: spintreebob

I thought that conservatives actually wanted the laws to be followed and wanted to stop criminals from entering the country. Illegals do not belong here. Let them get in line and wait like the rest of the world has to do.


253 posted on 02/04/2007 12:36:41 AM PST by haplesswanderer (Tomorrow belongs to us.)
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To: haplesswanderer

Wanderer, my friend.
1) Illegals ARE waiting patiently in line. Most immigrants FIRST come here illegally. THEN they get in line to make it legal. As you can well imagine, the government bureaucrats do not move very quickly.

2) If we make something legal, then it is no longer illegal. Problem solved.

Now let's get to the important stuff.

Dave Pittinger, former president of TapRoot is running for village trustee. He'd love your support and if you could volunteer for him big time, a little time, whatever you can manage.


254 posted on 02/04/2007 1:03:56 PM PST by spintreebob
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