September 05, 2006
Can The GOP Be Saved? Not By La Raza
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
Like the
famous racehorse
Silky Sullivan, Sen.
Rick Santorum is known as a great closer. Yet,
months ago, he had been virtually given up for dead by
pundits in his race against Bob Casey, Jr., son of the
popular,
pro-life, former
Democratic governor of Pennsylvania.
One poll
early this year had
Santorum down 23 points, an almost insurmountable
deficit. A Strategic Value poll had Santorum down 16
points.
Now the
senator who had been written off is finishing fast. An
average of all polls monitored by the
RealClearPolitics.com website finds him trailing by 6
points. The most recent Strategic Value poll confirms
it. Casey is at 47; Santorum, 41 and rising.
What
accounts for the surge? The Washington Times
traces it to one issue: "Republican strategists
say Santorum's
tough stand on immigration has been a key factor."[Santorum
shrinks Casey's poll lead By Charles Hurt September 1, 2006] No. 3 in the Senate leadership, Santorum was the highest-ranking Republican to
vote against the McCain-Kennedy amnesty bill that
would open a path to U.S. citizenship for 10 million of
the aliens who have either
broken into our country, or
are breaking the laws by being here, plus grant a
full pardon from all civil and criminal penalties for
the companies that employed them. McCain-Kennedy would
further empower corporations to go abroad and hire what
unions once called "scabs"
to bring here to take jobs Americans cannot take at
Third World wages.
"We
did a certain amount of internal polling and when it got
to immigration, it was very clear," says Santorum's
media consultant John Braybender, who prepared two tough
ads on immigration. "Rick's position versus Casey's
was overwhelming. If Casey or anyone else thinks this is
not an issue in
Pennsylvania, they should start
talking to voters."
Backing up Braybender is the same Strategic Value poll
that found 79 percent of Pennsylvanians opposed to
amnesty and 82 percent favoring a
wall on the Mexican border. Pennsylvanians, like the
rest of America, want the border secured and the
illegals sent home.
But
what will it take to wake up Karl Rove,
lately sighted at the Los Angeles convention of the
National Council of La Raza, where he won cheers for
urging legalization of
"undocumented" workers and boos for speaking of
border security? (The literal translation of
La Raza is
"The Race.") Imagine the reaction to David
Duke organizing a "National Council of The Race."
Two
months from election day, Republicans, divided over
Iraq, amnesty,
spending, the loss of manufacturing and an economy
that has left the working class treading water while the
investor class is singing
"Happy Days Are Here Again," are looking at
the prospect of something somewhere between a defeat and
a rout, or a massacre.
Yet if
Republicans wish to hold Congress, despite what they
may deserve, the Bushites could do no better than to
borrow from the Santorum playbook. What can Bush and
Congress do in 60 days?
One,
publicly set aside the
amnesty and
guest worker provisions of the
McCain-Kennedy bill. Bush cannot get them passed by
the House in any event. Second, extract and enact the
most urgent and popular provisions of both the Senate
and House bills.
Bush
should request $3 billion to $4 billion to start a
security fence along all major crossing points for
drug-dealers,
coyotes and
illegals. Then have Homeland Security begin
systematic and public deportation of felons and gang
members who are not U.S. citizens.
Tattooed thugs being
put on planes in cuffs will do the GOP and nation a
world of good.
The FBI
can provide the names. It has been tracking MS-13, or
Mara Salvatrucha, the most vicious and violent gang in
the hemisphere, with tens of thousands of members in the
United States, for a year now.
Then
call on Congress to reclaim its authority to
denaturalize and deport any new citizen whose conduct --
applauding Al Qaeda or engaging in
gang activity -- suggests they lied to become U.S.
citizens. Bush could then tour the
border again and, this time, shake hands with a few
of the
Minutemen patriots he earlier derided as
"vigilantes." Unfortunately for the GOP,
Rove & Co. believe that if Republicans take the hard
line on illegal immigration that
Pete Wilson took in 1994, the GOP will be as dead
nationally as it has been lately in California. They
forget: Wilson converted a 20-point deficit into a
10-point victory, captured both houses of the
legislature and brought in four new GOP congressmen.
Arnold is the only other Republican to win statewide
since then, and he
ran against driver's licenses for illegals. No
Republican who has taken the Rove-La Raza line has ever
won the Golden State. Why is the GOP so mindlessly
pursuing a transparently losing strategy?
In pandering to La Raza, Rove may be playing for the
long run. But as
Lord Keynes said, in the long run we are all dead,
which is where Republicans are headed if they don't get
it right on this issue. Like Rick Santorum
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his new book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.