The GOP’s big plan for 2008?

Guest Post by Morbo

You might have noticed that things aren’t going so well for the Republicans these days. The war in Iraq remains unpopular, many Americans are uneasy about the economy and the GOP continues to block expanding the popular State Children’s Health Insurance Program. On issues that matter to Americans, the Republican Party is fundamentally wrong.

But I would not count the Republicans out just yet. The GOP retains two powerful and closely related tools that, time and again, deliver for them on election day: Fear and demagoguery. I’m convinced that in 2008, both of those elements will be combined by the national Republican Party into a toxic cocktail around the issue of illegal immigration. This drink will be served to the voting public, and it just might give the GOP an edge.

We’re seeing hints of this strategy already. The special election in Massachusetts’ Fifth District was dominated by the illegal immigration issue, making the race closer than it should have been. In Virginia, which has statewide elections this year for House of Delegates and state Senate, Republicans are making illegal immigration their primary issue.

As they pursue this strategy, you can count on the GOP to engage in a classic bait-and-switch maneuver. It’s legitimate to talk about illegal immigration. Our country cannot absorb an indefinite number of people, and some communities are sincerely grappling with the changes wrought by immigration, legal and otherwise.

But at some point, the Republicans cleverly shift the discussion from illegal immigration to Latino culture in general and some nebulous perceived threat that this “other” presents to the American Way Of Life. Their argument suddenly shifts to things like, “People are speaking Spanish down at the mall!” “Hispanics are moving into your neighborhood!” “You’re going to be a stranger in your own nation!” and “They don’t share our values!”

Columnist Eugene Robinson recently summed up this line of thinking:

Undocumented immigrants are convenient scapegoats for perceived American decline, convenient targets for the unfocused anger that Republicans seem to believe their constituents feel — the sense that “they,” whoever they might be, are taking something away from “us.”

Bingo. Why does the GOP do this? In part because the party has no realistic solution to the issue of illegal immigration. Republicans offer draconian proposals like a mass round-up and deportation of 12 million people or a border fence that looks like something out of East Berlin. Even if feasible, neither plan would ever be implemented because of the Republican Party’s dirty little secret: Its Big Business component is addicted to the cheap labor illegals bring.

But this does not stop party leaders and candidates from scaring the bejeezus out of people all over America. They also don’t seem to care that they are shooting themselves in the foot with the growing Latino voting segment. My guess is that the GOP just wants to get through the next election cycle and will do whatever it takes to hold the White House. They figure that in the future, when the Latino bloc has become so huge it can no longer be ignored, they can find some way to scare them into voting Republican — perhaps by scapegoating gays, “Islamofascists,” people from the Seychelles or whatever.

The irony is, most of the people the GOP is targeting with this strategy are feeling a little uneasy over the so-called new economy and don’t quite know if they’ll have a place in it. They are the ones least likely to benefit from Republican economic policy. But as we know, fear and demagoguery can motivate people to vote against their own self interest.

For what it’s worth, that’s how I see 2008 playing out. I realize not everyone may agree, but I hope the Democrats are working on a ways to parry this scheme. Whatever the party’s response is, it must be easy to explain in a few sound bites. Like it or not, that’s how things work these days.

I guess getting folks to be afraid of the destruction of American culture by gays and lesbians just isn’t generating the funds and outrage any more. The villains du jour are now Hispanic.

  • The great-great-great grandfathers of todays Republican “values voter” were either some Know-Nothing railing against immigrants, or the immigrants whose humanity the Know-Nothing was questioning.

    Every time I see some Irishman, Italian, Pole, or any of the other descendants of the “lower” types True American Patriots didn’t want to see come here, and the fool is dumb enough to be a Republican parroting this crap, I am sure the idiot’s ancestors are spinning in their graves.

  • The Melting Pot.

    That’s the core of the Dem message for ’08. The history of an America that came into being because of immigration. All those immigrants. The Mayflower Pilgrims. Spanish conquistadores who saw a natural wealth that could not be counted in gold. Defeated Hessian mercenaries who decided to stay here. Refugees from the Boxer rebellion—and the fall of Saigon. Japanese-Americans who—even after being stuffed into detention camps—joined up and helped to smash the menace of Hitler. Young men and women of Middle Eastern descent who were not merely drafted, but also enlisted—in droves—to fight in Korea.

    The Melting Pot.

    Compare its contents to the legions of psychophants, railing on about “those evil immigrants.” How many of this foul-mouthed batsh*t brigade never served—but go absolutely foaming-at-the-mouth insane when it comes to the need for sending the sons and daughters of everyone else into harm’s way?

    The worst nightmare of the elitist, rabid xenophobia that is the Right?

    The Melting Pot.

    We’ve been on defense long enough, ladies and gentlemen. If Dems on the Hill cannot—or will not, due to their lack of intestinal fortitude—act against this mortal enemy of the Republic; these neoconservative, fearmongering profiteers who seek to rape the Republic and convert it into their private, country-club-like feifdom—then we ourselves must pick up the dropped torch, and take the fight to the Right.

    Put the Melting Pot onto the field—and let’s start playing OFFENSE….

  • Fear mongering bad. Ignoring the problem also bad. Illegal immigration is not just a few aspiring folks bravely sneaking across the border ( although there are those). It is a massive, organized business of millions of (paying) customers from south of the border to every state of the country exploited by companies and “contractors” as well. Illegal immigration is a problem. The pot is melting.

  • The GOP will do what they always do: trash Democrats. The Dems will do what they always do: roll over and play nice. Every so often I think we should re-read Cenk Uygurs’ two-year-old Seven Step Plan for Media Domination and Opponent Destruction.

    Step One:

    Select the strongest person on the other side – and target him for destruction. Attempt to destroy his credibility in the mainstream media, so that reporters will be skeptical of him and eventually his own party will disown him.

    Step Two:

    Comb through all of the speeches of the target. Fine one to two sentences that can be taken out of context and beat to death. Portray these few, isolated statements as extreme.

    Step Three:

    Repeat Step Two eight hundred times until three things happen: 1. Every time, the target is mentioned, the audience will think of only the charges you have repeated ad nauseam. 2. The conversation is no longer on the topic at hand but about what your target said about the topic. 3. Your target sounds like an extremist simply because you have repeated the charge enough times.

    Step Four:

    Co-opt the mainstream media into doing your dirty work. If you keep talking about one issue long enough (e.g., Swift Boat Veterans for Truth, what Howard Dean has said), the mainstream media will feel like it’s an important issue “everyone” is talking about and will be “forced” to cover it.

    Step Five:

    Get the targets own party or allies to turn on him by admitting – after lengthy and ceaseless questioning from the mainstream media, as well as, the conservative talkers – that what was said was not right or prudent. And then after this is repeated a couple of hundred times, even your opponents will start to believe that your charges against the target have a lot of validity.

    Step Six:

    Get your opponents to take down their own people for fear that they will keep getting asked the same annoying, senseless questions from you and your proxies. And the reason they will give is the one you conveniently planted – the target has become a distraction.

    Step Seven:

    Laugh as hard and as long as humanly possible that you just got the media, who you call liberal, and your political opponents to take down their own man because he had become a distraction when in fact the whole point of the exercise was to distract the media and your opponents from the real issue. Pat yourself on the back for killing two birds with one stone – destroying your target while avoiding the real issue – and making your opponents look weak and ineffectual. Laugh one more time.

  • Two quotes struck me in Morbo’s post:
    “Undocumented immigrants are convenient scapegoats for perceived American decline” and
    “The irony is, most of the people the GOP is targeting with this strategy are feeling a little uneasy over the so-called new economy and don’t quite know if they’ll have a place in it.”

    I couldn’t agree more. Bush’s “ownership society” is essentially a selfish every man for himself attitude toward how we relate to each other as a society. While Americans yearn for a neighborly Mayberry of their dreams, the reality is that Republican attitudes and policies promote economic and social division and isolation. While the Republicans have conned an audience into thinking they’re the party of Mayberry, their party platform is all about ripping the Ozzie and Harriet visions of the US apart. The decline I sense people feel about the US has nothing to do with gays or abortions, it’s about a new society that cares less about the individual than the New Deal society that Republicans are working so hard to dismantle into a brutally Dickensian vision of our national culture.

  • you are right on. this is the same card the rethuglians played using african-americans as the scapegoats. this is why the rethuglians are mainly in the south where this tactic was used to keep poor whites in line and poor(voting against their self-interest).

  • Latinos “don’t share our values”? Most Latino have a strong families, a strong work effort and are very religious. Arn’t these the values that arch conservatives supposedly believe in.

  • Republicans offer draconian proposals like a mass round-up and deportation of 12 million people or a border fence that looks like something out of East Berlin. Even if feasible, neither plan would ever be implemented because of the Republican Party’s dirty little secret: Its Big Business component is addicted to the cheap labor illegals bring.”

    Most “draconian” solutions have the advantage of being effective, though pointlessly harsh. GOP solutions don’t even have THAT to offer.

    Prosecution of employers with escalating fees for repeat offenses would solve the problem immediately.

    It’s that addiction to cheap labor that cannot vote, unionize, or enlist courts for grievances that keeps the GOP silent on this obvious, effective measure.

    Democrats need to embrace this measure and simultaneously call for increased INS funding so that more LEGAL immigrants can be processed quickly to cushion the blow to American industry. We might also then justly accuse the GOP of racism: ‘Oh yes, they want Latinos to work here, but they don’t want them to be citizens.’

    THAT’s a charge that could stick… and HURT.

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