The Many Deaths of the GOP
By Peter Brimelow
Letter from Brenda Walker
More Readers Respond
Too close to call,
phooey! At 6 a.m. November 8, the 2000 Election's
message was loud and clear: George W. Bush, despite
pitiful
pandering, has been spectacularly defeated among
Hispanics. Which means that, given the immigration
policy he
paradoxically favors, another nail has been driven
into the Republican Party's coffin.
* Nationally, CNN
is
reporting that Hispanics broke 35%-62% for Gore—a
landslide of LBJ proportions.
* In California,
Bush did
even worse among Hispanics, losing 27%-67%.
* In New York, Bush
was
annihilated among Hispanics, 18%-80%.
* In
Florida,
the much-touted Cuban vote does not seem to have
resulted in anything better than a draw.
* Even in his
home state of Texas, Bush lost handily among
Hispanics, 42%-54%.
The central
conclusion of Ed Rubenstein and my
1997 cover story in a Republican hack-sheet whose
name I forget remains intact: the trend is not the GOP's
friend. In the shockingly short run, only immigration
reform can save it. We will update this analysis when
final numbers are available.
[See
Swept Away, October 20, 2001]
But it's worth noting that the
Asian vote, which we then allocated equally between
parties, seems now to be emerging as Democratic,
55%-41%.
The Republicans
simply seem unable to dominate their
key demographic—whites—in the way that the Democrats
own theirs. The Nader phenomenon is entirely white. It
would be worth investigating further, if any Nader
voters escape being hunted down and lynched by enraged
Democrats.
The 2000
Presidential election punished courage as well as
cowardice. Pat Buchanan seems to have been fatally
irradiated by the controversy over his frank questioning
of World War II's inevitability in
A Republic, Not an Empire. His poll numbers
collapsed and never recovered. GOP strategists are
unlikely to be impressed by the observation of
Shakespeare's
Julius Caesar:
Cowards die many
times before their death;
The valiant
never taste of death but once.
Nevertheless, their
ultimate fate is likely to be the same.
November 8, 2000