March 10, 2009 The Fulford File, By James FulfordRichard Nadler Asks Republicans To Appeal To Disloyal Hispanic Voters By Not Deporting Their Illegal Compadres. Hmm.
Richard Nadler is a
neoconservative Republican who recently spoke at
CPAC—which, let me remind you, stands for
Conservative
Political Action Conference, rather than
"Republicans
Trolling For Minority Votes Action Conference." (And
not just because RTFMVAC would be much harder to
pronounce.) He's the president of something called
America's Majority
[email it],
headquartered in Overland Park, Kansas, which is
90.65 white. In spite of the name, America’s
Majority seems to concentrate on GOP outreach to
minorities who traditionally vote Democratic. But that's a problem with the
modern conservative movement. You have Republican
operatives who are willing to sell out both conservative
principles and, in the case of amnesty, sell out the
United States itself, in return for votes that
aren't there. Speaking of which…Nadler has also
published this idea in
National Review.
[At
What Cost? Conservatives should rethink their opposition
to ‘comprehensive’ immigration reform February
23, 2009] NRO still has a couple of people
working for it who understand the immigration issue (not
Ramesh Ponnuru) and so Nadler has been forced, or to
put it another way, has been
allowed to
publish another article on NRO:
Against Mass Deportation |
Answers to my critics, March 9, 2009. Someone sent us Nadler’s CPAC
speech. I’ve fisked it.
Richard Nadler: CPAC—Feb. 26, 2009
Panel: Building the Conservative
Hispanic Coalition: First: Do No Harm! It is customary at forums like this to celebrate the natural affinity of Latinos and conservatives on issues such as family, right-to-life, and entrepreneurship. [So it is. It's also mostly untrue. See James Antle's The Myth Of Minority “Natural Republicans”] I’m here to say: forget that. If we conservatives continue to insist on the mass removal of illegals, [Nadler gets one point for not saying "undocumented workers"!] either by roundups or by starving [No one is starving in America, least of all Latinos. (See photo.) What we actually want to do is stop them earning illegal money] them into self-deportation, our losses in the Latino community will persist and intensify. And contrary to a delusion widespread among us, these losses will be reinforced rather than offset by the votes of non-Hispanic whites. [That would be more or less "the voters" aka "The American People."] In 2008, conservative and Republican losses among Hispanics were devastating. This isn’t speculation. It is what happened. The national backdrop was a shift of roughly five percent favoring Democrats. Obama’s 53% improved on Kerry’s 48%. McCain’s 46% fell 5% short of Bush’s 51. But
among Hispanics, GOP losses were more severe. Bush’s 44%
Latino vote-share fell 13 percent, to McCain’s 31.
[Bush
did not get a
44% Latino vote share, Steve Sailer proved that. But
even if he did, 44% would have meant a massive landslide
the other way. But see
NRO Rebunks Bush’s Hispanic Share Myth,
where Sailer dealt
with a previous Nadler attempt to revive this number.]
And GOP congressional candidates garnered only 29%—15%
below 2004 totals.
[Of
course the 2008 candidates were facing a Democratic
Party led by
Barack Hussein Obama, a left-wing member of a
minority group. Hispanic
"natural conservatives" voted for him in droves.] Our loss was the Democrats’ gain. In plain language, between ’04 and ’08, Republican national candidates lost 30 Hispanic votes for every 100 cast. That’s not the national trend. It’s a bloody massacre.
Without a substantial percentage of that vote, conservatives can kiss goodbye to New York, New Jersey, Illinois, and California yesterday; we can kiss goodbye to Florida, Nevada, Colorado, and New Mexico today; and we can kiss goodbye to Arizona and Texas tomorrow. The deal breaker between Latino voters and conservatives isn’t border security, or official English, or future immigration levels. A Republican can run right on any of these, and sustain significant Latino support. The deal-breaker is deportation. A mass of evidence explains this. There is the fact that 40% of Hispanic citizens fear a deportation action against a friend or family member. There
is the fact that 44% of Latinos hear their clergy preach
against
"enforcement only" in the churches they attend.
[Not
just
their clergy, unfortunately. Our
clergy, too. ] There is the fact that 80% of Latinos favor comprehensive immigration reform. But forget all that. Use your common sense. I have yet to meet a conservative who doesn’t understand the dynamic of the Elian Gonzalez incident in 2000—how a SWAT team, on orders from a Democratic attorney general, invaded an ordinary Cuban home, [An American home. That was the problem.] and tore a screaming child from the arms of his protector. That sight, revisited nightly in Miami-Dade, carried Florida (and the presidency) for George W. Bush. What Republican didn’t understand that?
[The point of the Elian Gonzalez case was
that the Clinton Administration decided to send a child
whose mother had died bringing him to freedom back to
Communist dictatorship which is still an enemy of
the United States, and to a father who had
never married Elian's mother. Mostly what
deportation does is send adult Mexicans
back to Mexico, which is a free country, and which
you are allowed, even encouraged to leave, if you can
find someplace to let you in.] But due to our commitment to enforcement-only immigration policy, Hispanics are treated to Elian Gonzalez-style incidents nightly on Univision and Telemundo. In living color, viewers watch huddled Latinos cuffed by ICE raiders at their place of work, moms clutching their rosaries, priests pleading for mercy. It’s not rocket science to understand how Hispanic citizens react. [We are not persecuting clergy, for God's sake. They are persecuting us. American clergymen aid, abet, and harbor illegals, and Mexican clergymen do the same thing in the staging areas south of the border. But they're not persecuted. They're just complaining on behalf of their parishioners.] Only now, the villains are Los Republicanos rather than the Clintonistas. We all
enjoy happy talk about the natural affinity between
Republicans and Latinos.
[Speak for
yourself, Nadler.]
But given this broadcast bombardment, it is
increasingly irrelevant that Hispanic opinion on
right-to-life, or marriage, or school choice mirrors
that of conservatives.
[Hispanics
aren't really that worked up about gay marriage. What
they have is a
traditional old-fashioned
homophobia which makes them actively dangerous to
anyone they think is a
maricón.
] The linked prospects of ICE raids,
persecuted clergy, ruptured families, and mass profiling
spooks the legal, working-class Latino. As long as the
prospect of mass deportation remains in our playbook and
in our platform, Democrats will clobber us with it.
[Here's what he's saying, in
effect—Hispanics, whatever their political principles,
put being disloyal to the United States first. This
disloyalty manifests itself as a refusal to allow
the US to protect itself from any invasion coming from
south of the border. There is a certain amount of
truth in this, and it's why Republicans should not be
seeking Hispanic votes. It's also why they shouldn't be
listening to Richard Nadler. ]
Now, some of you think that we can lose the Hispanic vote by 40 percent, and make it up among non-Hispanics. I say: think again. First, it didn’t happen. In 435 contests, not a single Congressional district with a historical trend of voting Democrat elected a Republican "enforcement only" advocate. But dozens of enforcement-only Republicans went down to defeat, most of them in historically Republican districts. Some
wedge issue, huh?
[Read
Marcus Epstein on this. Nadler apparently hasn’t) There is a reason why the anticipated anti-illegal backlash didn’t deliver. The war against low wage labor is a war against entire major industries in both rural and urban America. [OK, but the war in favor of low wage labor is a war against the American worker, who represents a larger number of votes than the Chambers of Commerce, or the Business Round Table.] And the bulk of the beneficiaries of these threatened industries are by not Hispanics, or immigrants, or low-wage-earners. This isn’t a panel on economics. But to understand immigration politics as they are unfolding before your eyes, you need to understand one economic fact: With or without immigrant labor, American businesses must compete with producers from low-wage countries. The only question is whether they will do so here or offshore.
Millions of high-value-added jobs in our nation depend
on the availability of low-wage workers.
[However, they don't depend
on the labor being that cheap. A very small amount of
the cost of a basket of strawberries is paid to the
picker. ] The entire white collar world of
management, sales, and distribution in fruit and grain
production, ranching, meat-processing, forestry,
horticulture, and sea food requires low-cost seasonal
labor in the United States.
[The problem with this that the benefit of cheap labor
goes to the employer. The cost (medical, schools,
welfare and policing) is paid by everybody else.] There
is no question whether such labor will be used in these
major export industries. The only question is where. You
can hypothetically deport 9 million Mexicans from
America, but you’ll have less luck eliminating the
Mexicans in Mexico, the Argentinians in Argentina, and
the Chinese in China. Rural export
enterprises—agriculture, horticulture, forestry,
fishing, ranching—can, and will, go elsewhere. And they
will take their white collar jobs with them. That’s why
Farm Bureaus nation-wide oppose
"enforcement-only" immigration laws.
[We call this
corruption. In fact, we call it
"organized
crime."] In urban America, the hospitality industry is built on low-wage work, and with it, all the jobs that the convention and tourism business generates in restaurants, entertainment venues, and museums. These industries can’t relocate—but they can contract. That’s why urban Chambers of Commerce and hospitality groups demand a comprehensive immigration reform that includes guest workers. That’s why they are launching lawsuit after lawsuit against conservative-sponsored laws that insist on enforcement only. Deportationism—enforcement without simultaneous guest worker provisions—alienates major blocks of traditional Republican support in both rural and urban areas. And that’s why the much-trumpeted anti-illegal backlash failed to materialize. So far,
I’ve talked politics. But let me conclude with some
moral considerations. What is the pro-family rationale
for breaking up 6.6 million
"illegal"
families whose members include 4.9 million children and
3.5 million American citizens?
[There is never any need to
break up families when an
illegal parent gets deported. The parents can take
their children with them. If you got deported from
France, would you leave your child behind just to stick
the French taxpayer with the costs of his education?] Do you really intend to do that, then tell the Latino community that you are pro-family? How is our right-to-life commitment advanced by antagonizing the nation’s fastest growing pro-life demographic—Hispanics—and the nation’s most organized pro-life institutions—the Catholic Church and the Southern Baptist Convention? I don’t
know how it advances free market principles to terminate
seven million voluntary labor agreements with seasonal
workers, low-wage workers, and high-tech specialists.
And I can’t even guess how it advances national security
to spend billions to track and bust millions of busboys,
grapepickers, and nannies.
[Busboys
and
agricultural workers can be dangerous. In the long
run, they're more likely to kill you than actual
terrorists.] I don’t know why anyone calls this nonsense "conservative". [It's the patriotism and rule of law aspects, along with "nativism," itself a naturally conservative force.] But I do know that it must stop. Its persistence in conservative circles not only alienates Hispanic voters: it places our national security, free market, right-to-life, and pro-family agendas at risk. If the conservative movement is to thrive, mass deportationism must be explicitly repudiated, in our campaigns and in our platforms. Thank you.
Final point: there are some votes that a
political party shouldn't want. America is facing an
illegal invasion. If Hispanics don’t' support fighting
that, (some
do) then Republicans shouldn't be trying to appeal
to them, on principle, anymore than they would try to
appeal to
relatives of enemy aliens during wartime. If Republicans do, they'll continue to alienate the majority of Americans. (This means mostly white Americans, because black voters hardly vote Republican at all.) The numbers in Steve Sailer's November 28, 2000 article GOP Future Depends on Winning Larger Share of the White Vote are still valid. Nadler should read it. But he won’t. |