One would like to think the right would stop shrieking about immigration, if for no other reason, because it’s an electoral loser. When it comes to immigrants, demagoguery just isn’t working. At this point, it seems like a non-starter at the presidential level, and it’s not working out for conservatives down ballot.
As the far-right Wall Street Journal editorial page noted after Democrats won Dennis Hastert’s reliably-Republican House district, “Republicans such as Mr. Oberweis remain convinced that illegal immigration is a winning issue. And if the electorate were comprised mostly of Internet screechers and cable news anchors, they might be right…. Saturday’s result showed once again that a hard line on illegal immigration doesn’t win elections. The longer Republicans pretend that it does the more elections they will lose.”
But the fear-mongering continues unabated. In one of my favorite new examples, Rep. Paul Broun (R-Ga.) spoke up at a House Homeland Security Committee markup of a bill designed to protect the country from chemical attack. Broun wanted to connect the issue, as best he could, to illegal immigration. Al Kamen has the story.
“This is a national security problem,” Broun told the lawmakers. “I’m told by people who are involved in helping just monitor the border that roughly 40 percent of the people that are intercepted crossing our border are not Mexicans.”
(Actually, the official stats for FY 2007 show slightly less than 7 percent are OTMs, or “Other than Mexicans.” The ASICs, or “Aliens from Special Interest Countries” — most anywhere in the Middle East and a chunk of South Asia — totaled 297. That’s three-hundredths of 1 percent. Still, it’s not zero, so let’s continue.)
“Some of these people that are coming across the border are from other Central and South American countries,” Broun said. “But there is quite a large number of people that are coming across the border that are of Middle Eastern origin as well as Asian origin. A lot of these are single; they have no families. I don’t think they’re coming here to cut our grass or work in our chicken plants. So I think it is an extremely important issue that we must solve.”
Let’s see, to Congressman Broun, 40% is roughly equivalent to 0.03%. And because Middle Eastern people are apparently scary, this is all very relevant to a discussion about chemical-weapon attacks.
Broun’s trouble with math may be the least of his problems.
Lest anyone think Broun is being taken out of context, TP has the video and this transcript:
“This is a national security problem. I’m told by people who are involved in helping just monitor the border that roughly 40 percent of the people that are intercepted crossing our border are not Mexicans.
“Some of these people that are coming across the border are from other Central and South American countries. But there is quite a large number of people that are coming across the border that are of Middle Eastern origin as well as Asian origin.
“A lot of these are single; they have no families. I don’t think they’re coming here to cut our grass or work in our chicken plants. So I think it is an extremely important issue that we must solve.”
And House Republicans wonder why no one takes them seriously on matters of public policy.