Sailer and his Critics: now, Wanniski
Peter Brimelow writes: it's kind of arresting to have Jude Wanniski accuse you of going "over the edge"! When I first met Wanniski in 1978, he was in full marginal-tax-rate-cut evangelical mode. You went through three phases with him. First, you were impressed by his ability to link high marginal tax rates to so many ills. Second, you began to suspect he'd claim it was a cure for the common cold. Thirdly, you'd reflect that maybe it takes a monomaniac to change public debate. And Jude has changed public debate. The immigration issue needs someone like him.
By Steve Sailer
VDARE's
election analyses have generated a lot of responses.
So let me dip back into my mailbag.
In
response to my article, "GOP
Future Depends on Winning More of the White
Vote", in which I suggested that Bush
could have carried more union voters by
attacking the AFL-CIO's call for another amnesty
for illegal immigrants, Supply side economist Jude
Wanniski wrote Peter Brimelow:
If Bush had followed your advice, he would have
gotten the same percentage of the electorate as
Pat Buchanan did when he did exactly what you
suggest here. You've gone over the edge here,
Peter.
Let's look at the numbers. Bush outreached like
crazy, yet lost votes among blacks and Asians
(relative to Dole!), and didn't get back to
Reagan levels among Hispanics. He got a grand
total of 8% of his votes from minorities.
Whoop-de-doo. The assumption that a Republican
candidate couldn't win 57% of the white vote
seems amazingly defeatist.
The concept that running against illegal
immigration is a vote-loser is a curious
delusion of the Bush 2000 campaign.
Recall how Sonny Bono made a name for
himself in politics. During a debate the
moderator told him, "You have two minutes
to give your opinion of illegal
immigration." He stood up, and said,
"It's illegal." Then, he sat down.
Hell, a famously hardnosed INS border guard got
elected to Congress from El Paso running against
illegal immigration!
Bush ran to the left of The New York Times Editorial Board on illegal
immigration.
They denounced
the AFL-CIO's call for a new amnesty.
What did Bush say? Instead of taking it to the
AFL-CIO in order sow discord between the leftist
leadership and the patriotic rank and file, he
let them operate in peace. Union muscle cost him
most of the Great Lakes states.
Perhaps Jude can take some consolation from the
news that Dubya's outreach did win him one
racial minority: Eskimos.
[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.]
December 15, 2000