How The Sailer Strategy Could Win California
By
Steve Sailer
Bill Simon surprised
the experts in losing California's gubernatorial
election by only 5 percentage points, 47%-42%, to
massively-funded Gray Davis. In contrast, in 1998, Dan
Lungren, the Republican Attorney General, lost to Davis
by 20 points, 58%-38%.
Simon was not a
talented candidate, but he's a good man who wouldn't
have deserved the humiliating loss that the smart money
was gleefully predicting. The namesake of his impressive
father
William E. Simon, he leads an admirable life as a
businessman, devout
Catholic, major philanthropist, occasional surfer,
and attentive father. During the campaign, my
younger son went on a Cub Scout campout with Simon, who
was tenting it as the leader of his son's pack. It's
hard to imagine the ferret-like Davis spending a
campaign weekend up a canyon in Cell Hell where he
couldn't
dial for dollars for a full 48 hours—even if he had
any children.
It was soon clear,
though, that a man like Simon who enjoys such a fine
existence away from politics didn't need to win in the
worst away, the way
Pete Wilson—the most successful California
politician since Ronald Reagan—needed to win … at least
as the Los Angeles Times would define "worst."
Ward Connerly, leader of the 1996
Proposition 209 initiative that banned the use of
racial preferences in California government agencies,
tried to
explain to Simon right after his primary victory
that Wilson's re-election, despite the economic
collapses,
riot, earthquake, and fires during his first term,
was because he took strong stands against
multiculturalism, especially against illegal
immigration. (Here at VDARE.COM, we
call these “National Question” issues.)
But Simon didn’t
listen. Instead, he ran on little more than two
contentions: that Davis' for-sale
sign on the governor's office was a disgrace to a state
which had a proud record of electing principled men like
Hiram Johnson, Earl Warren, and Ronald Reagan. that
Simon would be a better manager than Davis.
(Unfortunately, the two black marks against Davis's
management skills -- the electricity crisis and the
budget deficit -- could be attributed plausibly to
failures of the free market that Simon so
enthusiastically endorsed: the Republican-instigated
electricity deregulation of 1996; and the
Internet bubble.)
Simon ran away from
the three vote-winning but subsequently-ignored National
Question initiatives (against illegal immigration,
racial quotas, and bilingual education) that former
Governor Wilson had endorsed to his political profit.
The legend has grown
that California is now so Hispanicized that true
Republicans have no chance.
Harold Myerson writes the same article making this
point over and over, most recently in the November 18
American Prospect Magazine. The take-home
lesson: any attempt to motivate white voters will be
massively punished by the supposedly huge number of
Hispanic voters.
In fact, of course,
whites a.k.a. Americans still make up three-quarters of
California’s electorate. That’s the basic, brutal reason
Simon came so close—despite being crushingly outspent by
Davis.
George W. Bush, who
wasted many millions of dollars in California in 2000
only to see Al Gore spend zip and drub him by double
digits, tried to avoid being seen in public with Simon.
Karl Rove, Bush’s Steve Sailer, may have been sulking
because he failed to persuade California Republicans to
select former Los Angeles mayor Richard Riordan in the
primary. In an election where the President's prestige
as Commander-in-Chief proved crucial, Bush's absence was
badly damaging. Even worse, while Rove unleashed his
secret but now famous get-out-the-white-vote drive with
tremendous results in some 30 states, California wasn't
one of them.
Nevertheless, the
same absolute number of California whites showed up to
vote in 2002 as in 1998. But the number of minority
voters dropped by around 45%. Further, while Lungren
lost 51%-45% among whites in 1998, Simon won the white
vote 46%-43%.
The vaunted
Republican "surge" among Hispanics didn't seem to make
it out of Florida. Simon only received 24% of the
Hispanic vote, according to the LA Times
exit poll [Adobe
Acrobat needed]. And sure, it would have been
nice for Simon to win another 10 points of the Hispanic
vote, the way Republican Rick Perry did in Texas.
But many pundits seem
to forget that 10% of the Hispanics’s 10% share of the
California electorate is a grand total of – one per cent
(1%). That's a ridiculously small increment to worry
about.
The reason Perry won
big in Texas and Simon lost in California was not their
relative Hispanic appeal. It’s the fact that Perry
won 70% of the white vote, vs. 46% for Simon. If
Simon had won 70% of the 74% of the California
electorate that was white, he wouldn't have needed a
single minority vote to be elected governor.
The same applies at
the national level. Bush lost the popular vote in 2000
because he only got 54% of the white vote, vs. 59% for
his father in 1988. But in 2002, the final
Gallup Poll showed the House Republicans carrying
the white vote 58%-38%. Combined with strong white
turnout, this far more than offset the GOP's performance
among minorities—which actually worsened despite all the
Bush-Rove pandering.
Got that? GOP
performance among minorities worsened in 2002. The
Gallup Poll, which correctly predicted a six-point
Republican victory overall, also showed the Democrats
winning the minority vote by an 82%-14% margin. In
contrast, the 2000 Voter News Service exit poll had Gore
beating Bush 77%-21% among nonwhites. (For the full
story on the demographics of the latest election, see my
updated and almost encyclopedic UPI article from last
Tuesday, "Whites,
not Latinos, win it for GOP.")
Bottom line:
Bush-Rove blew a good chance to elect a Republican in
California and strip the Democrats of much of their 2004
fundraising muscle.
Can the California
GOP win in the future? The lesson of the 2002 election: only
if it motivates the
white vote. To do that, I believe Republican
candidates must directly attack the contradiction that
lies at the heart of the California Democrats' political
perpetual motion machine: the interaction of immigration
and environmentalism.
The Democrats favor
mass immigration because
more immigrants means more poor Democratic voters,
which increases the
population, which creates more
sprawl, crowding, and pollution, which increases the
pressures for more environmental regulations, which
Democrats favor, which means more affluent, tree-hugging
voters vote Democratic.
Got that? Well, then,
you’re almost unique. Obviously, the Democrats’
positions are contradictory. But as long as the GOP is
terrified of talking about immigration, it
can't point that out.
Now, there are plenty
of Republican mouthpieces in the rest of the country who
argue that Californian voters should just forget about
trying to protect their environment and instead welcome
ever more millions of immigrants. But they don't
understand why Californians are so peculiarly
pro-environment.
It's simply because
our nature out here in California is so much more
civilized than yours. I used to live in Illinois. Going
for a walk in the woods meant you were guaranteed to run
into several of the following: mosquitoes, humidity,
underbrush, mud, sleet, and/or flatness.
In contrast, if you
want to see what California's environment looks like,
click
here for samples from the late landscape
photographer Galen Rowell, the Ansel Adams of color
photography—and a
supporter of immigration limitation.
In California, the
only way to alleviate the ever-worsening conflict
between property rights and environmental conservation
is to alleviate population pressure—by cutting
immigration. California GOP candidates must run strongly
against immigration.
Indeed, a Republican
who ran on building a security
fence from the Pacific to the Gulf of Mexico
like the one that successfully keeps would-be
suicide bombers from the Gaza Strip out of Israel would
probably win about the same percentage of Hispanic
voters as Simon won by pretending that the immigration
situation is hunky-dory. The recent Pew-Kaiser
poll of registered Hispanic voters found that 48%
say there are too many immigrants in this country, vs.
only 7% who say there are too few. Hispanics do tend to
like legal immigration because it gives them control
over which of their relatives get to come here. But they
frequently hate illegal immigration because they suffer
the most direct consequences: lowered wages, overcrowded
schools, and that annoying third cousin who shows up
uninvited and wants to
sleep on the living room couch until he gets himself
established in a few years.
What about individual
California races?
In 2004, Barbara
Boxer, much the less respected of the state's two
Democratic women Senators, is up for re-election. In
2006, Davis will be term-limited out, and Diane
Feinstein will be 73 and possibly retiring from the U.S.
Senate.
Arnold Schwarzenegger
is currently widely assumed to be a shoo-in for the
Republican gubernatorial nomination in 2006, after he
successfully sponsored an initiative providing
after-school programs "for the children”—an ominously
goo-gooish thing to do. Clearly, Schwarzenegger is a
formidable man who has succeeded at everything he has
tried in life. But he has no known views on immigration
and the National Question. (Even more ominously, he
tried to rescue Bush I from Pat Buchanan in the 1992 New
Hampshire primary.) And Schwarzenegger did more to
promote the use of one type of illegal and dangerous
drug—steroids—than anyone else in history. That may (and
should) raise some qualms about his candidacy.
Potential Senatorial
candidates remain much murkier.
No Republicans will
hold statewide office, so the party must get creative.
Many VDARE.COM
readers will disagree, but personally I kind of like the
idea of a black candidate willing to run on this
National Question platform. That could inoculate against
the
inevitable charges of racism, which do matter to
California’s liberal whites. I think Ward Connerly
would make an excellent candidate. Or maybe a military
officer or one of the retired black jock millionaires
that California is full of. For example,
Joe Morgan, a Hall of Fame
second baseman, according to baseball statistician
Bill James the smartest ballplayer ever, currently a TV
commentator, author, and owner of a Coors bottling
plant, was converted to Republicanism when a Houston
Astro in the mid-60s by--Congressman George H.W. Bush. I
don't know the politics of Dusty Baker, a hero to Los
Angelenos as a baseball player and to San Franciscans as
a manager, but the three-time Manager of the Year could
do well.
OK, OK – I admit
choosing Ezola Foster as his running mate didn’t help
Pat Buchanan!
But California is a
lot less hopeless for the Republicans than Harold
Myerson argued—or, to be honest, than even I believed
before November 5th.
[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.]
November 16, 2002