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HispanicVista Guest Columnists |
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Immigration Impact Despite the mounting pressure (boycotts,
legal challenges, protests) to repeal Arizona’s enforcement law
(SB 1070), polls indicate that the majority of Americans support
the law by almost two to one—and, at last count, as many as 17
other states are considering similar legislation. However, while
it may seem advantageous for some in the GOP to use this
anti-immigrant wave as political momentum for re-election, the
long-term political impact may be larger and more harmful than
they realize. Can the Republican Party (once the ‘Party of No,”
then the “Party of Hell No” and now the “Party of Papers
Please?”) really afford to further alienate the fastest-growing In a recent New York Times letter, the
author draws a comparison between the “There are a lot of similarities between
what’s happening in
It doesn’t take a political scientist or a
pollster to understand what happens when you alienate such a
large and growing swathe of the American electorate. Latinos—who
not surprisingly oppose The letter continues: There is widespread resentment among Latinos that they will be singled out as a result of this law, despite the insistence of Arizona officials that racial profiling is impermissible … Previous and earlier surveys by Mr. Bendixen, the pollster, show that almost two in three Latino voters have either a family member or friend who is an undocumented worker …He says Hispanics resent the suggestion that immigrants are more prone to criminality, an allegation that is contradicted by the vast majority of academic studies and statistics. Recent evidence of the Latino vote can be
seen in places like Bennet went from leading Norton by 12 points with Hispanic voters to a 21 point advantage. That large shift in a Democratic direction among Hispanics mirrors what we saw in our Arizona Senate polling last month- Rodney Glassman went from trailing John McCain by 17 points with them in September to now holding a 17 point lead. While Latinos’ cultural conservatism may overlap with Republicans’, it’s not likely that Latinos will forget 1) the Tea Party/Republican anti-immigrant rhetoric surrounding SB 1070; and 2) SB 1070 itself as well as ensuing copycat legislation. So, even though Republicans candidates who endorse SB 1070 (and similar legislation) might garner electoral support in the short-term, riding the anti-immigrant wave will more than likely drown them, and some in the Republican Party, out in the long-term. |