February 19, 2003
CPAC Cymptoms?
[Also
by David Walsh:
Immigrant Crime: Who Wants To Know?
]
By
David C. Walsh
It’s not long since immigration
reformers picketed the Conservative Political Action
Conference (CPAC), the annual gathering organized by
the American Conservative Union (ACU), to protest
the Establishment’s exclusion of the topic of
immigration.
But CPAC 2003, held over the
weekend of January 30-February 1, was the first, a quick
review of 30 previous years’ conference highlights
indicates, in which
immigration played any role.
In the past, the ethos was
distinctly
WallStreetJournalesque:
cheap
foreign labor helps the economy (read: my
personal bottom line)…and who wants to be demonized
by the Left, anyway?
It’s a sad irony that 9/11 helped
spur changes in this blinkered vision.
CPAC 2003 drew 4,000 from around
the country. Pundits and heavy hitters from the
administration lined up to offer their take on the
current state of conservatism and how to combat
liberals. The press kit boasted:
“CPAC
is the only place you can see, hear and meet people like
Ann Coulter, James Inhofe, Phyllis Schlafly, Tom
DeLay, Ollie North, Elaine Chao and Alan Keyes, up close
and personal.”
CPAC 2003’s featured keynoter:
Vice-President Dick Cheney. Subject: Iraq and how the US
would “get” terrorists.
Turning up, too, were
David Horowitz, Ken Starr, Senate Majority Whip
Mitch McConnell, Sen. Lindsey Graham, columnist Bob
Novak and
Rep. Katherine Harris.
Dozens of topics were broached:
“What Can Bush Learn From Putin?” “The Growing threat of
Radical Environmentalism,” “Islam:
Religion of Peace?” and “Research & Politics
of Missile Defense.”
The first hint of shifting CPAC
attitudes was the presence (apparently not unwelcome) of
immigration reformers roaming the halls. The folks from
Middle American News and
Immigration Watch seemed gladdened, if a bit
surprised by how many reached for their handouts. So,
frankly, was I.
Then there was Saturday’s
Immigration Panel.
I’d pictured a modest anteroom with
perhaps a
few dozen paleos huddling silently. Wrong. Hundreds
of conferees—perhaps tired of watching Michael “Let ‘em
all in!”
Barone hawk his book—spilled into the giant Marriott
Gateway Ballroom, there to hear messages ranging from
the turgid and pettifogging to the crystal-clear and
resounding.
In the first category:
John Fund of the Wall Street Journal. His
message at first seemed to fly straight and true,
especially when opining that illegal aliens ought to be
deported, “starting with criminal aliens.” Plus he
opposed
bilingual education!
Then - waffling. Fund urged
caution.
California’s economy, it seems, “dries up”
without illegals. Further, Fund argued that, before
troop-stationing (proposed the previous night by
former Virginia governor James Gilmore), border-sealing,
or
“Berlin walls” were attempted, “less emotional,
more practical, more creative” solutions should be
tried.
He did not speculate how many more
illegal aliens might have arrived by the time these “creative”
ideas were exhausted.
Amid groans from listeners, Fund
voiced sympathy for the mostly-Mexican lawbreakers,
crying, “You cannot throw out eight million people
tomorrow morning!” Nor did guest worker programs and
“regularization” (= amnesty) trouble Fund…so long as
they were “orderly.”
Not all of what Fund,
Daniel Pipes, Grover Norquist and other dais-mates
said was rubbish. We heard disquieting but useful
analyses about Moslem birthrates, the ongoing “Balkanization”
of America by multiculturalism, the tendency of
foreigners not to speak English
at home, the need (“perhaps”) to reduce immigration
to 300,000 per annum…Ideas with which VDARE.COM readers
have long been acquainted with, but apparently new at
CPAC.
Less usefully, some thought that
Canada and not Mexico represented the bigger immigration
threat…!
Most folks (judging from the
applause) had come to hear Michelle Malkin. In a
blaze-red sweater with an attitude to match, the
celebrated “Invasion” author, VDARE.COM contributor and
scourge of the open border lobby was in full cry.
She nodded perfunctorily at panel
mates but distanced herself from them on key points.
Half-measures and bromides would get short shrift, and
fence sitters were flayed with refreshing abandon.
Of the much-touted
“regularization,” Malkin hissed, “It won’t work!”
Immigration talk must begin and end with the
unmistakable recognition that more 9/11s will occur
until the US gets control of its frontiers, she warned.
In a reference to timorous conservatives (especially
white politicians), she remarked that a major problem
was the fear that proposing tough solutions only invites
bad press and the howls of minority activists. This,
though, is not a problem for Malkin:
“The
presumption that people who call for clear and
consistent enforcement of the law are somehow racist ...
against certain ethnic groups that seem to send us a
large number of illegal aliens, is absolutely
preposterous.”
To John Fund’s nostrum that “we
bring in the world’s best and brightest ... in an
orderly process,” she responded, “we already have
that process in place. The fact is, we have nine to
eleven million illegal aliens who have defied that
process!”
On what should decisions about who
ought to be permitted entry be based, Malkin asked
listeners.
“Enhanced profits? Promoting political correctness?
Increasing ethnic votes? Protecting illegal aliens? Or
kowtowing to foreign governments? No, no, no, no—NO! The
government should put the safety and sovereignty of
America first!”
The cavernous room shook to
applause.
Parks like Arizona’s
Organ Pipe National Monument, Malkin said, “are a
smuggler’s paradise and a national security
nightmare.” Citing government estimates for
trespassers in that once-pristine region, she said
tartly, “If a thousand illegal aliens a day can cross
through a single park, so can a thousand terrorists!”
Malkin explained that she’d traveled the Southwest to
speak with Border Patrol, INS officials and regular
police officers. Sadly, despite the recent
window-dressing publicity about beefing up the frontier,
morale remains low. “They tell me that the decision
... is a political one” to make the border something
hardly worthy of the name.
Nor are Democrats alone to blame:
“Unfortunately, we have to talk about
Republicans who have helped collude to keep our
borders as loose as they are.”
Furrowed brows were observed along
with the loud clapping.
To the ”regularizers,” she had
nothing good to say. “The problems with
regularization and amnesty-type programs is that they
send ... a bad message.” The situation was more dire
concerning criminals: “300,000 alien fugitives remain
on the loose today ... and there is no systematized
tracking of
criminal alien felons.... And
‘sanctuary’ for illegals remains the policy of
almost every metropolis.”
That included her home town of
Seattle, WA, where, Malkin deadpanned, “they are
desperately in need of regime change.”
(Having three months before
9/11 published in VDARE.COM what I’d hoped would be an
eye-opener on the failures to follow immigrant
crime, this news did not exactly make my day.)
The
U.S. constitution, Malkin reminded the audience in
no uncertain terms, lays out the need for the new
country to be protected from
foreign invasion.
Then she challenged, “If
conservatives do not rise up in defense of the
Constitution—who the Hell will?”
This brought the crowds to their
feet.
Would it have been nice had
Secretary Cheney put in a word (or three) about
immigration in his speech vowing in his keynote speech
to “get” the terrorists?
Certainly. And of course,
immigration was but one of a great many topics that got
a CPAC airing.
But it’s a start.
I hope. Peculiarly for a
“conservative” bash, two members of the Latino-racist
group,
La Raza (“The Race”) floated about just outside the
meeting room. Aware I was covering immigration, a CPAC
media person twice came to importune me, asking if I had
time for “just two more, from La Raza” - the pair
was “really eager” to voice their group’s views.
Until they met me. I explained I
was writing a piece for VDARE.COM’s
Peter Brimelow—“you know, the author of
Alien Nation?”
Whereupon the smile of the doe-eyed
young blonde lady became a rictus, and in an eye-blink
she and her silent male consort vanished.
David Walsh (send him
email) is a freelance
writer/photographer (Click
here to view his work)
in the Washington D.C. area. Among his recent articles
is an exposé of Hispanic drivers’
disproportionately poor safety record.