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Some Republicans (Lindsey Graham) See Racism As a Factor in Immigration Stalemate
BuzzFeed ^ | 1/29/2014 | John Stanton

Posted on 01/30/2014 7:25:35 PM PST by Qbert

WASHINGTON — For more than a year House Republican leaders have insisted the chamber would act on new immigration laws. And for more than a year, Republicans have done virtually nothing on the issue — despite intense pressure from activists, business groups, and the nation’s changing demographics.

And although there are a variety of reasons for inaction, one Republican lawmaker recently offered a frank acknowledgement that for many House Republicans, there’s one issue at play that’s not often discussed: race.

“Part of it, I think — and I hate to say this, because these are my people — but I hate to say it, but it’s racial,” said the Southern Republican lawmaker, who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “If you go to town halls people say things like, ‘These people have different cultural customs than we do.’ And that’s code for race.”

There are a range of policy reasons for opposing plans to liberalize immigration or to regularize undocumented immigrants in the country, ones revolving around law-and-order concerns and the labor market. But that perceived thread of xenophobia, occasionally expressed bluntly on the fringes of the Republican Party and on the talk radio airwaves, has driven many Hispanic voters away from a Republican leadership that courts them avidly. And some Republicans who back an immigration overhaul, including Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican and one of the Republican Party’s most vocal champions of a pathway to citizenship, acknowledge that race remains a reality in the immigration debate.

“There will always be people [who have] different reasons for opposing the change. We have a history in this country of demagoguery when it comes [to immigration]. You know, ‘Irish Need Not Apply.’ There’s nothing new going on today that’s gone on before. This isn’t the first time that there’s been some ugliness around the issue of immigration,” Graham said.

But Graham said despite that legacy, voters, including strong majorities of Republican primary voters, are lining up behind the idea of citizenship.

“Here’s what I don’t get: When you ask primary voters in a poll would support a pathway to citizenship where you have to learn English, pay a fine and go to the back of the line, it’s 60% in South Carolina,” Graham said. “Nationally, it’s over 70% … it seems through polling, if nothing else, that the Republican Party gets it.”

“There’s some racist people, certainly,” said Ana Navarro, a Republican strategist and advocate for immigration reform. “But I want to think it’s a minority and that’s not what’s going to decide the immigration debate.”

Graham agreed, but said he is puzzled by the resistance to moving on new immigration laws in the House.

“I don’t know. I have no idea, I have no idea. I can’t explain it. I think maybe it’s a fear of a primary,” Graham said when asked what makes his colleagues so hesitant on the issue.

With Republicans meeting in Cambridge, Md., this week to discuss, among other things, recommendations for a set of immigration policy bills, House Republicans’ reluctance to touch the issue is a major facing Republicans.

“Part of it is the fact that most of our districts are more worried about a primary opponent instead of a general opponent. Immigration is a thing you get primaried over … nobody is afraid of the pro-reform forces. They are afraid of the anti-reform forces,” the operative said.

It’s confusing for Republicans when in conservative states like South Carolina, Graham said, changes to immigration policy are met with much less public skepticism than perhaps many assume.

“We have a tourism economy where we need workers [and] we have an agricultural economy. I think … the employers in South Carolina make a compelling case that we need workers,” Graham said.

Unlike abortion, Obamacare, the deficit, or federal spending, there’s no organized, well-funded opposition: There are no media campaigns of note or lobbying blitzes on Capitol Hill. In short, Republicans feel pressure without any formal outside group really applying it.

Instead, Republican lawmakers and operatives alike also said that while fiscal issues have been driven by large, national groups like the Club for Growth and Heritage Action, Republican reluctance to tackle immigration reform is much more a bottom-up phenomenon.

Opposition to any form of citizenship for the 11 million undocumented immigrants currently living in the United States has long been an article of faith for Republican voters, much like opposition to any changes to Social Security are for Democrats. Immigration is now a third-rail issue in the GOP.

Talk radio, particularly regional and small-market talkers, have also kept up the pressure, Republicans said, explaining that the airwaves back home are constantly filled with talk of “amnesty” that makes backing new laws difficult.

Those factors, combined with the brutal beating Republicans took during the 2007 immigration reform push, means many lawmakers — even those who weren’t in Congress at the time — are leery of the issue.

“I think it is an issue that left a scar. Even though opposing organizations are not as organized, are not as vocal this time around, people [still] see it [as] … a political time bomb,” Navarro said.

And then there are the pragmatic Republicans in Boehner’s conference, who argue turning to immigration will distract from the party’s focus on Obamacare and insist sticking to that is the better political play for the party in 2014.

That argument doesn’t hold much sway with advocates for new immigration laws. “I understand the desire to not distract from Obamacare. But I’m a Republican who believes we can do both. We have the momentum now,” said Brian Walsh, a Republican strategist who has worked with bipartisan immigration advocacy groups.

For Walsh and other similarly minded Republicans, the greatest frustration has been what they view as the outsized influence of the small cadre of Republicans in the House, talk radio hosts and activists who they say have paralyzed the party.

Republicans are “listening to a loud minority … [but] those who oppose this haven’t been challenged to say, ‘What’s their plan?’” Walsh said.

“They’ve been able to get away with yelling about part one while ignoring part two” of the political equation, he added.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: South Carolina
KEYWORDS: amnestypimps; gopestablishment; graham; illegalimmigration; lindagraham; lindseygraham; rino; senateraces
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To: Qbert
RINO twink.


21 posted on 01/30/2014 7:51:00 PM PST by Viking2002
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To: Mustangman
Stopping illegal immigration would pressure home countries to reform because their citezens would have no where to escape to. Mexico might actually beome a decent country if they actually had to deal with their most desperate people.

I’m sorry if any of this sounds harsh, but it’s reality. I had no money when I was young. I hoed weeds in a field one summer and the next summer I worked in a tomatoe cannery to make money.....and I’m as white as a piece of paper. I never thought I was above doing anything to make my way.


A double Amen on that.
22 posted on 01/30/2014 7:51:33 PM PST by cripplecreek (REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
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To: Qbert

If there is racism it is coming from those playing the race card to advance their push for amnesty.


23 posted on 01/30/2014 7:52:23 PM PST by Iron Munro ("Sooner or later everyone sits down to a banquet of consequences." - Robert Louis Stevenson)
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

Exactly....or when you don’t want to even bother making an argument.

Lindsey Graham et al have no principles. Illegals have broken the law to be here. This isn’t about their race. This is about maintaining American values and ideals. If they want to be Americans, there is a legal way to do so.


24 posted on 01/30/2014 7:53:45 PM PST by Girlene (Hey, NSA!)
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To: Qbert

Any comment by me about Sen. Goober would be removed.


25 posted on 01/30/2014 7:54:45 PM PST by Oldeconomybuyer (The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.)
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To: Mustangman
IMO, there shouldn't be any guest-worker programs, HB-1 visas, green cards, etc. Even legal immigration should have a six-year moratorium to it.

We're a melting pot, but we are boiling over and the water is scalding the sides of the pot and stove. The pot and stove is the U.S. As a melting pot, we're supposed to be simmering, so the herbs and spices can trickle throughout the fruited plains, like a finger that arises from a pie on a ledge that tells the character to come here in a Tex Avery cartoon.

26 posted on 01/30/2014 7:55:01 PM PST by Extremely Extreme Extremist (15 years of FReeping! Congratulations EEE!!)
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To: Qbert
One question for Lindsey, how much time have you spent living on the Mexican Border? Then how would you know how forgiving law breakers affects the lives of those who live on the border? Are we going to continue forgiving them for breaking the law until all of Mexico, and Central America have crossed the border illegally?

Ooops that was more than one question.

Hey Lindsey your partners in crime McCain and Flake have never lived on the border either. The questions apply to them too.

27 posted on 01/30/2014 7:58:45 PM PST by c-b 1 (Reporting from behind enemy lines, in occupied AZTLAN.)
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

Rick Snyder wants to import 50,000 H1B visa holders to Michigan for jobs they’ll magically create. Meanwhile college students are rightfully asking why they’re going into debt for jobs that won’t be there.

Frankly if we were going to bring in legal immigrants I would rather give the low skilled middle eastern Christians asylum in Detroit. If anyone can make something from nothing, they can.


28 posted on 01/30/2014 8:00:36 PM PST by cripplecreek (REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
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To: Qbert

When an overweight office bound Hispanic activist calls American workers lazy there is a racial angle.


29 posted on 01/30/2014 8:01:49 PM PST by ObamahatesPACoal
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To: Extremely Extreme Extremist

As a melting pot the idea was for everyone that immigrated here to become an AMERICA and do it ASAP...this country decided to be a salad bowl instead of a melting pot and everyone that comes here is encouraged to keep their culture. I am all for family history, recipes, etc. but what is happening is people are not just bringing some of their memories and becoming Americans, they are trying to bring their third world country here with them...and succeeding.


30 posted on 01/30/2014 8:01:51 PM PST by Tammy8
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To: Qbert

That little dickweed is “puzzled” why anyone would resist making millions of illegals into citizens.


31 posted on 01/30/2014 8:07:33 PM PST by Williams (No Obama)
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To: SeminoleCounty

"This Soros Stooge needs to be primaries.."

We told Repubs not to play with fire on this issue, and the leadership didn't want to listen. So we'll just have to exact punishment in the form of taking out Graham, Alexander, Cornyn, McConnell and the rest of those do-nothing's...

32 posted on 01/30/2014 8:08:00 PM PST by Qbert ("The best defense against usurpatory government is an assertive citizenry" - William F. Buckley, Jr.)
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To: Doogle
..picturing Lindsie rubbing two sticks together......wonder if one of his clerks whispers in his ear every once in a while is really a RAT plant. Hey Graham, how much did you make on this flub?

I can't believe that POS was in the same Air Force I was in. Disgusting.

33 posted on 01/30/2014 8:08:55 PM PST by Mark17 (Chicago Blackhawks: Stanley Cup champions 2010, 2013. Vietnam Vet 70-71 Msgt US Air Force, retired)
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To: Qbert

Since when is Hispanic considered a race?


34 posted on 01/30/2014 8:12:10 PM PST by SkyDancer (Live your life in such a way that the Westboro church will want to picket your funeral)
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To: jonrick46
 photo original_zps371add23.jpg
35 posted on 01/30/2014 8:13:15 PM PST by SkyDancer (Live your life in such a way that the Westboro church will want to picket your funeral)
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To: Tammy8
people are not just bringing some of their memories and becoming Americans, they are trying to bring their third world country here with them...and succeeding.

That is a deliberate plan by rats and other anti American scum bags, in order to bring the country down a notch or two, and diminish American influence in the world. Am I cynical or what?

36 posted on 01/30/2014 8:15:12 PM PST by Mark17 (Chicago Blackhawks: Stanley Cup champions 2010, 2013. Vietnam Vet 70-71 Msgt US Air Force, retired)
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To: Qbert

37 posted on 01/30/2014 8:15:55 PM PST by McBuff
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To: Qbert
How can the good people of South Carolina re-elect this disgusting little trollop troll?
38 posted on 01/30/2014 8:22:38 PM PST by ZULU (Magua is sitting in the Oval Office. Ted Cruz/Phil Robertson in 2016.)
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To: SkyDancer

We all know that they have lost the argument when the resort to the race card tactic. However effective that tactic is, we can turn the tables on them. We need to get our own Sharptens to go out and call the Democrats racists. The demonization of the Democrats should be unceasing and loud. If you push a negative hard and deep enough it will break through into its counterside. Give them a taste of their own medicine.


39 posted on 01/30/2014 8:28:08 PM PST by jonrick46 (The opium of Communists: other people's money.)
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To: Qbert

Linda will be out of office in 2015.


40 posted on 01/30/2014 8:32:27 PM PST by VRWC For Truth (Roberts has perverted the Constitution)
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