March 02, 2006
Guest Worker Amnesty Pushes GOP To The Brink
By Bryanna Bevens
Reports reaching California from the
Imperial Capital on the Potomac indicate that the
Senate finally began work today (March 2) on an
immigration bill to answer the
flawed but
fairly tough border security bill that the House
passed last year. [Immigration
Bills May Split Republicans: Bipartisan Call for Guest
Worker Program at Odds With Push to Secure Borders,
by Jonathan Weisman, Washington Post, March
2, 2006]
To my
amazement, I hear it’s seriously argued inside the
Beltway that the Senate can add a "guest worker"
plan and that then Republicans will be able to sell the
whole package in their districts this fall as
"immigration reform."
Even some
immigration reformers are said to be worried that
legislation, if passed, might "defuse" the
issue—at least temporarily.
Bryanna to
Beltway (from years in
California electoral politics and from living out
here in immigration Ground Zero, the
southern Central Valley):
It
won’t work.
The idea
is a Beltway bubble, the sort of thing that happens when
politicians spend too much time away from the grassroots
socializing with donors.
More from
Bryanna to Beltway—specifically to the GOP:
Not
only will it not work—but YOU are in danger.
My
antennae tell me that, nationwide, the Republicans are
in more trouble now than at any point since they gained
control of Congress in 1994.
Here’s a
tumbleweed in the wind:
Last week,
California Republicans held their Spring Convention.
Although it was completely devoid of substance, there
were two telling events.
The first
was an eye-opening speech by Governor Schwarzenegger
containing this assertion:
"After all, we Republicans have a history of boldness. I love that.
Abraham Lincoln struck down slavery. Teddy
Roosevelt fathered the
environmental movement. Dwight
D. Eisenhower built the interstate highway. And
Ronald Reagan tore down the wall and defeated
communism."
[Complete speech
here.]
What’s
wrong with this picture? This: Republican
accomplishments stop with the
Reagan administration.
But 20
year-old triumphs have little to do with the problems of
today.
The other
event worth mentioning occurred early Sunday morning.
Attendees awoke to find letters slipped under their
doors—letters that urged voting members to blindly back
the Governor’s proposals and stop the rampant dissent in
the ranks.
The rank
and file Republicans were told to
place party unity above principles.
Just two
examples of conflicting principles: the Governor wants a
$1
minimum wage increase and to appoint liberals to
various
judicial seats.
No wonder
the rank and file are rampant.
And
Schwarzenegger didn’t even mention the word
"immigration."
This in a
state where it was recently
reported that one-fifth of high school
seniors don’t speak English well enough to graduate—and
don’t see why they should.
Hmm… when
you think about it, this seems to be the emerging theme
of the new, improved GOP—what I’ve called "the
Mehlman Monstrosity."
Thus, just
two months ago, the Republican National Committee held
their Winter Meeting amid similar conflict.
Randy Pullen, a committee member from Arizona,
drafted a resolution asking the RNC to officially oppose
all guest worker legislation.
The White
House intervened (of
course) and urged members to maintain party unity
over principles and back the President blindly.
And they
did…just like the members in California.
Recently,
I asked Randy Pullen whether he thought the guest
worker/ border security combo would go down well in
Arizona. He said flatly:
"Of
course, some
[politicians] will want to spin it. It would hurt the
credibility of
Senator Kyl if he tried to spin it.
Arlen Specter - who cares? If Kyl tried it here, he
would immediately lose face in the party."
Lose face in the
Party…meaning, with the
rank and file Republicans.
The
voters, as some like to call them.
Pullen is right.
Let’s look a few months into the future:
2006 Candidate: The
new Guest Worker Program we passed this year will enable
us to keep our economy growing with foreign workers.
Average Voter: My
husband worked in
construction for 15 years but lost his job to an
illegal alien that was willing to work for half the
wage.
2006 Candidate: Did
I mention that it strengthens our national
security?—if there is a
foreign national in our country, we will know where
they are.
Average Voter: I
already know where they are…they’re at my husband’s
old job site.
2006 Candidate:
Once again, Republicans are solving the America’s
problems.
Average Voter:
Funny, that’s what George Bush the
First said…just before we tossed him out of office.
George H. W. Bush
lost his 1992 bid for re-election in spite of his 56%
approval rating for one simple reason:
Rank and file,
grass roots Republicans refused to
support him after he
broke his word and raised taxes.
And guess what?
Inside the Beltway, raising taxes was universally
praised as politically astute and the right thing to do.
But the Beltway
was wrong.
WRONG!!
Rosemary Jenks, the Director of Government Relations
for
Numbers USA, strikes me as one of the few people in
Washington with a finger on the real pulse of the
electorate.
She thinks a
guestworker bill may well pass the Senate:
"The
bottom line is that
House Republicans understand that the public does
not want amnesty, and that they do not support the
importation of more foreign workers. The Senate, as
usual, is clueless as to public feeling on this issue."
(Rosemary did
mention that the Senate might get a better feeling come
the November election! But that could be too
late!)
As for the grass
roots movement and their reaction, Rosemary was quite
adamant that we would see a rebellion:
"I
absolutely believe that passage of a guest
worker/amnesty program (and any
guest worker program the Senate passes will be an
amnesty because it will allow current illegal aliens to
apply for work permits, whether or not they are allowed
to stay permanently—which, of course, they will do
regardless of what the law says) will fire up the
grassroots and have a major impact on the November
elections."
Indeed—"a major
impact on the November elections" which could bring
about a Democrat majority in the House and possibly the
Senate.
Rosemary is right, too. I can see this in my own email.
I get a ton of email from self-proclaimed "Recovering
Republicans." These are examples:
Paul Weyrich, political consultant extraordinaire
and the Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Research
and Education Foundation, sees the same writing on the
wall:
"…if the e-mail and
snail-mail traffic I receive is any indication, lots and
lots of people are telling me they do not intend to vote
in the 2006 election. Others are saying they will vote
for third-party candidates."
[Take
Heed Republicans—The Alarms Have Been Sounded,
February 20, 2006]
Weyrich cites immigration as the issue that is splitting
the GOP, specifically the guest worker amnesty plan.
"The President is
insisting upon a link between securing the borders and
having some sort of guest-worker program. In theory he
may be correct. But conservatives want none of it until
we have a handle on illegal immigration."
The White House should be careful. There is more at
stake here than losing a Republican majority.
President Bush could face impeachment.
Paul Weyrich is one of the few willing to say it—but he
says it convincingly:
"I am here to tell you
that if Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) is Speaker of the House come
next year George W. Bush will be impeached. It just
takes a majority."
You see, unity is a powerful argument to Republicans.
They are, as
Dick Morris has said, a hierarchical party.
But betrayal is a powerful issue in Republican politics
too. And the Guest Worker Amnesty legislation betrays
all known Republican principles.
An example of how betrayal motivates the rank and file:
In 1995, Republicans in the California Assembly achieved
a one-vote majority…until Democratic speaker Willie
Brown convinced Paul Horcher (R-Diamond Bar), Doris
Allen (R-Cypress) and Brian Setencich (R-Fresno) to
vote with the Democrats.
Horcher cast his vote to keep
Willie Brown as Speaker…the enraged Republicans had
him recalled.
Allen was elected Speaker. The enraged Republicans
organized a recall election in her district as well. She
resigned and handed the reins over to Setencich.
Republicans rallied and…you guessed it, had
Setencich recalled.
I
had the pleasure of working the campaign that unseated
Setencich. I will tell you, I have never seen
Republicans so organized and focused. And I have
worshipped
Curt Pringle ever
since.
The GOP has nothing to sell this year. (Iraq,
anyone?) I hope they don’t see a guest worker amnesty as
a selling tool.
Betrayal…nothing
calls a rank and file Republican to arms faster than a
duplicitous politician.
Let the White House and GOP Senate leadership—and the
California Republicans—pass guest worker legislation and
find out for themselves!
Bryanna Bevens [email
her] is a political consultant and former chief of staff
for a member of the California State Assembly.