By DICK MORRIS
January 4, 2006 -- Republicans face one of the
trickiest political problems they have faced as a party since Clinton pre-empted
their program through triangulation and left them temporarily devoid of
issues.
As the number of illegal immigrants mounts in the
United States, the demands of the party's nativist constituency for tighter
border controls and immigration enforcement threatens to put it at odds with
America's rapidly growing Hispanic population, dooming the GOP to possible
minority status not just in California and New York but in Texas and Florida as
well.
The push-pull between Hispanic demands for respect
and nativist concerns about job loss, crime, education costs and urban crowding,
all exacerbated by illegal immigration, poses a huge problem for party
leaders.
The obvious answer to demands for limits on
immigration is the border fence passed by the House and pending in the Senate.
Slated to extend over 700 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border at a cost upwards of
$2 billion, the barrier, coupled with increased enforcement manpower and
effective employer sanctions, will likely give the United States a means to
control population inflows. But what of the economic, moral, foreign-policy and
political issues a fence will raise?
Economically, Mexican illegal immigrants are not in
search of welfare but come looking for work. That they find it is obvious.
Otherwise how could they send $11 billion a year home to their families and why
would they come in increasing numbers?
Clearly the American economy needs their services.
On a micro-economic level, they do jobs Americans don't want at wages below what
we would consider acceptable - and perhaps below those that are legal as well.
On a macro level, their presence holds down labor costs and permits the Federal
Reserve to take more chances with low interest rates than it could in an
inflationary-wage market.
The obvious answer to these concerns is a grand
bargain that couples the strictest border defense with a generous guest-worker
program, granting legal status to Mexican immigrants and regulating their
numbers, working conditions, and wages - and assuring that they contribute to
Social Security and other taxes.
The foreign-policy implications of a fence are
harder to handle. Already Latin resentment against the United States is fueling
the rise of an oil- and cocaine-based leftist oligarchy throughout our
hemisphere. Castro now has friends in power in Venezuela and Bolivia and
moderate allies in Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina. In Peru, a leftist Chavez
look-alike, Ollanta Humala, is leading in the presidential race. In Nicaragua,
Daniel Ortega may be heading back to power by a gradual military coup. And in
Mexico itself, a Chavez protégé, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, is leading in the
polls for the July 2006 presidential race. Can you imagine having a border with
a Chavez or a Castro, whose ability to disregard American concerns would be
underscored by massive oil reserves?
But it is in the realm of domestic politics that
the GOP would pay the highest price for a purely nativist policy. Texas has now
become a majority-minority state, joining California. Can its wholesale flip to
the Democratic Party be far behind? Not if the Republicans are seen as an
anti-Hispanic party! Is the GOP really willing to make political war against the
Latinos by rubbing their noses in a border fence when they now account for 14
percent of the population and will probably increase their share to 18 percent
over the next 10 years?
The permanent political price the Republican Party
would pay for this shortsightedness is reminiscent of the way it antagonized the
African-American vote in the '60s. Remember that Dwight Eisenhower carried
blacks in 1952 and 1956. John F. Kennedy only narrowly prevailed in the black
community. It was not until Barry Goldwater and Richard Nixon, pursuing the
Southern strategy at all costs, drove blacks into the arms of the Democrats that
their votes were irretrievably lost. Is the GOP, driven by the anger of its
base, going to make Hispanics permanent Democrats?
By moving away from English-only policies and
reaching out to Hispanics, Bush has closed the gap among Latino voters. Gore
carried them by 30 points, but Kerry only won among them by 10. But the border
backlash may be undoing all this good work.
The obvious answer is to couple a fence with a good
guest-worker program, with a citizenship track predicated on good behavior. But
if the Republican Party allows the House bill to become law - a fence with no
guest-worker program - it will be antagonize the vital Latino vote and consign
itself to permanent minority status.