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Mexico's Take Over Of California: Complete By 2014?
In March, April and May, I wrote a series of
columns about the sorry condition of California's GOP (here,
here
and
here). I also handicapped the party's dismal prospects for
winning any of the three most critical elections—either of the
two U.S. Senate seats currently held by Democrats
Barbara
Boxer and
Dianne Feinstein or the 2010 governor's race to replace
termed-out Republican incumbent
Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Although
Boxer
will also
run in 2010 for re-election, California is in such dire
straits that all eyes will be on the governor's contest. That
shapes up as a probable match between Republican political
novice Meg Whitman versus either of two Democratic veterans,
Feinstein
or the omnipresent former governor and current Attorney General
Jerry
Brown.
But since early spring when I gave my first
assessment, California's political sands have shifted. And with
the change, a Republican has suddenly vaulted into the forefront
of the state's politics.
In fact, although it's way early, I make
State
Senator Abel Maldonado the odds-on pick in 2014 to become
California's governor.
For immigration reform patriots, that's
much more bad news than it is good news. While Maldonado is
indeed a Republican—technically—he points to his migrant farm
worker parents as the reason for his fierce illegal immigration
advocacy.
How a relatively
obscure state representative from
Santa Maria
will become California's first Hispanic governor since
Romualdo Pacheco, Jr., in 1875 is an interesting tale. [Senator
Abel Maldonado Has Made A Name for Himself, by Steve
Chawkins and Patrick McGreevy, Los Angeles Times,
February 22, 2009]
Maldonado will pull it off with a combination of luck and skill.
Specifically, this is how he'll do it:
In a
stroke of good fortune for Maldonado, Lt. Governor John
Garamendi recently announced that he was abandoning his moribund
gubernatorial effort to run instead for the congressional seat
about to be vacated when
Ellen Tauscher leaves for Washington DC to serve as
Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International
Security.
[Ellen
Tauscher Is Off to the State Department for Sure, by
Anne Schroeder Mullens, POLITICO.com, March 19, 2009]
That means
Schwarzenegger must appoint Garamendi's replacement. And, as
it happens, Republican Schwarzenegger owes Republican Maldonado
a favor.
During
Schwarzenegger's bitter dispute with the state legislature to
close California's $40 billion
budget
deficit (via higher taxes and more debt), Maldonado
infuriated his conservative Republican colleagues when he sided
with the governor.
But at the same time, Maldonado ingratiated
himself, not only with Schwarzenegger, but also with
California's Democrats and independents eager to end the
impasse.
Step one in Maldonado's ascent, then, will
take place in a few weeks when Schwarzenegger appoints him to
replace Garamendi.
Suddenly, Maldonado will emerge from
relative political obscurity to become a key player who, because
of his Mexican immigrant background, will be hyped to the max by
California's
adoring MainStream Media.
Step two will occur in November 2010 when
either Feinstein or Brown easily defeat the Republican
candidate—presumably Whitman.
By 2014—the next year the gubernatorial
election rolls around—several things will have evolved, all of
which play in Maldonado's favor.
-
California's overall
economic health will remain on life support—horrible
news for an incumbent hoping for another term.
-
Feinstein will be 81, Brown 76 but Maldonado only 47. In
age-obsessed California that creates a huge edge for
Maldonado. According to
census data, in 2014 the average age of California's
Hispanics will be about 30. Ask yourself this simple
question: will those
young Hispanics vote for the fossilized white incumbent
or the polished Maldonado who can appeal to their ethnic
roots?
-
California's demographics will have shifted even more
dramatically toward Hispanic domination. The state's
population will be about 40 percent Hispanic—the largest
voting bloc.
-
Add to Feinstein
and Brown's age and demographic negatives is that they have
knocked around California politics for nearly four decades.
If voters of all stripes aren't sick of them by 2014, then I
don't know what.
Maldonado has been building toward his political ascendancy
since 2000.
As a
freshman state assemblyman he accepted an invitation from
then-presidential candidate
George W. Bush
to give
a
Spanish-language speech to the
Republican
presidential convention aimed at wooing Hispanic voters. (Vainly,
of course).
And in
2008, again addressing the Republican convention, Maldonado
closed with
these words (translated from Spanish):
"John
McCain and my father would be good
amigos. Ladies and
gentlemen, que viva
the immigrant story."
Maldonado's
bracero father, it is worth noting,
lived in California as a permanent resident for
more than forty years before he recently became a citizen.
In his own words, Maldonado calls himself "the
future of this party" and claims that the GOP needs more
Latinos to be its public face.
"If we don't change, we're going to go back to the old
ways, and we're going to continue to lose,"
said Maldonado, who faulted the party's hard line against
illegal immigration. "They don't get it on illegal
immigration," he said.
Republican
old-timers who may disagree with Maldonado "can beat me
up all they want," he told reporters at a luncheon while he
was surrounded by erstwhile allies who, since his support of
Schwarzenegger's budget compromise, now view him as an enemy. [GOP
Withering Away in California Heat? by Alex Isenstadt,
Politico.Com, April 14, 2009]
Another Maldonado bonus: his campaign will
attract a broader base of non-Hispanic California voters, who
cannot support other would-be Hispanic candidates like
the sleazy Los Angeles Mayor
Antonio
Villaraigosa, but can stomach the vastly smoother, more
intelligent Maldonado.
Last but certainly not least, Maldonado will
play his immigrant success story to the hilt. His family's
strawberry
farm is a 6,000-acre multi-million dollar business that
ships produce worldwide.
By the time Maldonado reaches the governor's
mansion,
Mexico's takeover of California—what remains of it—will be
complete.
Thousands of educated, wage-earning
Californians like me
move away
every month.
Moving in are under-educated,
low
earning but
needy aliens.
Maldonado's family succeeded. But the vast majority of
immigrant newcomers fail.
For those optionless Californians left behind,
the picture will not be pretty.
By 2014, Hispanics could control state politics, both the
legislature and the governor's seat.
Whatever token resistance now exists to defeat
illegal immigrant measures like
driver's licenses for aliens or reduced access to
health care
will vanish. Don't expect Maldonado to
get religion once he becomes California's chief executive.
Of course, none of this is inevitable. As
Peter Brimelow
recently
pointed out, the GOP has so completely failed to mobilize
its base in California that in 2008 John McCain actually failed
to carry the white vote there. But there is no sign that
"Republican
strategists" are going to get the message.
California's tragedy has been a long time coming. Immigration
reform patriots have predicted the state's demise for years.
Still, for this California native, watching it actually
happen is
unbearably sad.
Joe Guzzardi [email him] is a California native who recently fled the state because of over-immigration, over-population and a rapidly deteriorating quality of life. He has moved to Pittsburgh, PA where the air is clean and the growth rate stable. A long-time instructor in English at the Lodi Adult School, Guzzardi has been writing a weekly column since 1988. It currently appears in the Lodi News-Sentinel.





