Posted on 10/12/2016 5:29:17 AM PDT by Gamecock
In a 2013 email published a few days ago by WikiLeaks, Hillary Clinton expressed views wildly at odds with those of the American citizenry: My dream is a hemispheric common market, with open trade and open borders. Most of Donald Trumps Republican defectors are poised to help her achieve her open-borders dream.
As Republican elites continue to defy Republican voters on the crucial issue of immigration, its not surprising that the Senates open-borders crowd is refusing to back the man wholargely because of his hawkish immigration position was chosen by Republican voters to be their partys nominee. While only 30 percent of Senate Republicans voted for the open-borders Gang of Eight legislation (30 percent too many), the percentage was far higher among Trump defectors. Among senators who were in office in 2013, 55 percent (6 of 11) of those who now say that they cannot support Trump voted to support the Gang of Eight legislation.
Kelly Ayotte (R., N.H.) says she cannot support and will not vote for Trump. Susan Collins (R., Maine) says she could not support Trump. Jeff Flake (R., Ariz.) says Trump needs to withdraw from the race. Mark Kirk (R., Ill.) says Trump should drop out. John McCain (R., Ariz.) says he will not vote for Trump (but will instead write in the name of some good Republican, who in McCains imagination is running for president). And Lisa Murkowski (R., Alaska) says she cannot and will not support Trump, who has has forfeited the right to be our partys nominee. All six voted for the Gang of Eight bill.
Over in the House, Speaker Paul Ryan has largely withdrawn his support from Trump, saying hell no longer campaign for him and will not defend him (although he still endorses him). Now that Marco Rubio has been (partially) chastened, Ryan is perhaps the most prominent and forceful Republican backer of open-borders immigration law.
The Gang of Eight legislation wasnt voted upon in the House after it passed the Senate, so its harder to gauge rank-and-file House members views on the matter. The Huffington Post, however, published a list of 121 Republican House members that the Gang of Eight reportedly thought were persuadable on immigration reform. Thats only about half of the Republicans in the House at the time, yet most Trump defectors appeared on that list. Of the 17 Republicans who were in the House in 2013 and arent currently supporting Trump (according to USA Todays list), 13 (76 percent) were listed among those who were persuadable on immigration. And that doesnt even include Cory Gardner (R., Colo.), who was on that list as a congressman and is now a Trump defector in the Senate.
In sum, very few Republican officeholders who oppose Trump are losing much sleep over what Hillary Clinton would do on immigration, with Republican assistance, over the next four years. As Margot Anderson put it on Monday at the Federalist, "Republicans glee in joining the Trump takedown shows the wheels are already greased for Clintons identity-politics agenda if she gets elected."
On this issue, as on most issues, the citizenry has a better sense of whats right than the ruling class does. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in 1970, 4.7 percent of those living in the United States were immigrants. After four-and-a-half decades of rampant illegal immigration, that percentage is now 13.6 percenthigher even than during the great waves of immigration in 1880 or 1920. Within eight years, the Census Bureau says, we will break the all-time mark of 14.8 percent, set in 1890.
Meanwhile, the position held by President Obama and Hillary Clinton is that immigrants shouldnt be assimilated into the American way of life, but rather "integrated" into an identity-politics regime. As my colleague John Fonte writes, this is the difference between encouraging "new immigrants to think of themselves as Americans first and foremost," and prioritizing "ethnic, racial, and gender identities over a unifying national identity."
These are serious matters most importantly for the future of the country, but also for the future of the Republican Party. John Kraushaar, writing for National Journal on Monday, observed, "Republican Party leaders have been grappling with an uncomfortable reality: Their most reliable voters are entirely disconnected from the GOP leadership." Nowhere is that truer than on immigration and the GOP divide over immigration goes a long way toward explaining the GOP divide over Trump.
Good article, but the author’s claim that the foreign born percentage of the population is nearing a record because of over forty years of rampant illegal immigration is only telling part of the story. Of course illegal immigration plays a part, but forty years of mass legal immigration is the bigger culprit. Even taking anchor babies into account, mass legal immigration has had the bigger demographic impact.
I know it breaks Goodwin’s law, but saying Trump supports amnesty is Goebbel’s `big lie’.
He beat 16 RINO squishes by pushing border security and enforcement of our immigration laws.
Tell this lie to a crow and it would blush. This is straight BS.
Trump isn’t for amnesty. The politicians who are backing away from Trump do. To clarify, the headline in full would read:
“Most of the GOP Senators who have defected from Trump were supporters of the push for amnesty”
It does not break Godwins law- That law states that you lose an argument when you have no reasonable response so you simply declare that your opponent is “like Hitler” (ipse dixit)
So it’s fine
Trump makes “all the right enemies” — the RINO and libscum vermin who would subvert our constitution and subject us to rule by un-American invaders.
The headline is badly written because it is ambiguous. What they are trying to say, I think, is that these RINO Trump-haters are the ones who backed amnesty.... not that Trump backed amnesty.
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