Those
Whom the Gods Wish to Destroy, They First Make - GOP Strategists?
By Steve
Sailer
The Washington
Post's political analyst Thomas B. Edsall caused a
stir recently with a fairly good article: "As
Nation Changes, Parties Are Warned They Need New
Tactics to Woo Voters." It's a solid look at
the dire implications for the GOP of current
demographic trends, although it should have cited
Peter Brimelow's and Ed Rubenstein's 1997 "Electing
a New People" article in National
Review, which made the same point four long years
ago: the Trend Is Not the GOP's Friend.
[Peter
Brimelow comments: Ha!]
Also, Edsall never
explains where all of these new Hispanic voters are
coming from. The two causes - immigration and
higher birthrates - are apparently no longer fit to be
discussed in polite society. Demographic changes in
the electorate are now to be thought of as this vast,
inexorable force, like Global Warming - only much less
under human control. The notion that American voters
should have a democratic say in who gets to move to
America is considered hopelessly old-fashioned, on the
rare occasions when it's considered at all.
Most of the strategists quoted say that the GOP
must woo minorities harder, because, as "Richard
Bond, a former GOP chairman, said: 'We've taken white
guys about as far as that group can go'"…..!
This concept is never challenged. Why the GOP Brain
Trust is satisfied to lose 40% of the white male vote
and 51% of the white female vote, as Bush did in 2000,
is never explained. In contrast, Gore lost only around
5% of the black female vote.
So far this year, Bush's two big political pushes
have been to appeal to Hispanics by backing more
immigration and to alienate whites by backing off on
environmentalism. Even leaving aside the obvious
connection between immigration-driven population
growth and environmental degradation, the GOP's
political calculus would appear to flunk fifth grade
math. The white voting population is about an order of
magnitude bigger than the Hispanic voting population.
Let's just compare the number of citizens who voted
against Bush last November to get a sense of where the
GOP's greater opportunities in 2004 lie. In 2000, 8.2
times more whites than Hispanics voted against
Bush. Heck, among people who voted against Bush, white
males alone were 3.4 times more numerous than
Hispanics of either sex. Bush lost more votes among
white guys than he did among all minorities of all
sexes.
The oldest advice in politics is to hunt where the
ducks are.
These kinds of calculations do not require a Ph.D.
in Mathematics. You just go look up the exit
poll results and mess around with them. So, why
does it sometimes seem like I'm the only Republican in
America with Microsoft Excel? I can guarantee you,
though, lots of Democrats understand these numbers.
Most of the ideas for wooing current Hispanics that
the Bush GOP has come up with so far involve
mortgaging the party's future by letting in millions
more of their countrymen. Many of them will eventually
become Democratic voters. But that won't happen until
after George W. Bush has retired and George P. Bush
has taken his place as the Bush dynasty's candidate.
Even in the short run, however, opening the
floodgates ever wider is likely to be a losing
strategy because the Democrats can always out-pander
the Republicans. They're experts at it. Republicans
are amateurs. The sheer shamelessness of Bush's
sucking up to the Fox-Castaneda administration and
their plans to dump more of their poor people on us
may have temporarily caught the Democrats flat-footed.
But the Democratic Party has not yet begun to pander!
When
they do get their momentum up, watch out.
[Steve Sailer [email
him] is founder of the Human Biodiversity Institute and
movie critic for
The American Conservative.
His website
www.iSteve.blogspot.com features his daily
blog.]
July 20,
2001