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Defeated Extremist, J.D.
Hayworth |
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Racist, J.D. Hayworth |
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Republicans Bring Out Old Defeated
Extremist, J.D. Hayworth, as
Spokesman against Immigration Reform
WASHINGTON DC ( By
Frank Sharry, Huffington Post) May
21, 2009
— Yesterday, the Senate Judiciary
Committee's Subcommittee on
Immigration held a hearing about
border policy. Its chairman, Chuck
Schumer (D-NY), has declared 'game
on' for immigration reform. This is
the same Schumer who was architect
of the Democratic takeover of the
Senate, who always has his eye on
what the party needs to do in order
to win. As such, it takes a sledge
hammer to the tired conventional
wisdom immigration reform is "too
hot to handle," and instead confirms
the time is most certainly now.
President Obama gets it, too,
despite some troubling moves the
Administration has been roundly
criticized for this week.
The President announced just
yesterday he will host a White House
strategy session with Members of
Congress during the second week of
June and has consistently pledged to
get started on immigration reform
this year.
Besides being the right thing to do,
moving forward on reform is smart
politics, plain and simple. Real
immigration reform is the key to
earning the trust of our nation's
fastest growing block of voters
—
Hispanics
—
and also to showing moderate and
swing voters who are sick of
demagoguery on the issue that
Washington is stepping up to the
plate to solve tough problems.
But while the President and Senator
Schumer look to the future, the
panel's ranking member, Senator John
Cornyn (R-TX), was caught facing
squarely in the other direction.
Cornyn called talk show host,
defeated Congressman, and notorious
blowhard J.D. Hayworth to testify as
an expert on the border.
Until his 2006 defeat, Hayworth was one
of the most outspoken immigrant bashers
in Congress, whose screeds were parroted
on David Duke's blog and cheered by the
Federation for American Immigration
Reform (FAIR)
—
labeled an anti-immigrant hate group by
the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Hayworth is indeed the poster child for
a politics that has driven Hispanics
away from the GOP and has failed to
scare up the support of key swing
voters.
Even conservatives blame the immigration
issue for Hayworth's 2006 loss,
according to a study promoted by Linda
Chavez: In Arizona's 5th district,
six-term GOP incumbent Rep. J.D.
Hayworth actually switched positions on
immigration from being a sponsor of
guest worker legislation to becoming one
of the most outspoken opponents of
immigration, even advocating a
moratorium on legal immigration from
Mexico. In 2004, Hayworth received
almost as many Hispanic votes as his
Democrat opponent, with each receiving
about 48 percent; but in 2006, Hayworth
lost 59-36 percent in Hispanic
precincts.
This is consistent with what we saw in
the 2008 election. As I've consistently
chronicled, in 20 out of 22 competitive
races during the 2008 cycle, the
pro-reform candidate defeated the
anti-immigrant hardliner.
What's more, new polling of Hispanic
voters in 13 states conducted by
Bendixen & Associates found, by a 71
percent to 11 percent margin,
respondents believed the Democratic
Party best represented the opinion of
the Hispanic community on immigration
issues vs. the Republican Party.
Additionally, only 23 percent of
respondents in the Bendixen poll thought
Republicans "will do the right thing" on
immigration issues, while a whopping 60
percent thought Republicans "will not do
the right thing" (17 percent don't
know).
This, with Gallup reporting
self-identified Republicans have dropped
to a near-historic low of 21% and that
the GOP's share of nearly every major
demographic subgroup had shrunk since
2001.
Note to Senator Cornyn: step away from
the extremist
—
he is dangerous to your party.
How? In Congress, Rep. Hayworth's
extreme views on immigration were so bad
he was the only Member of Congress to
object to the draconian "Sensenbrenner"
bill in 2006
—
a wide-ranging crackdown infamous for
its intent to make felons out of both
unauthorized immigrants and the
religious and service workers who assist
them
—
for not being harsh enough! The
"too-soft-for-Hayworth" Sensenbrenner
bill is widely seen as the catalyst that
spurred millions of people across the
nation to pour out in the streets in
protest, a tradition that has evolved
into the May 1st immigration and
workers' rights rallies we know today.
In fact the momentum created by these
events was certainly one force that
drove such a high percentage of
first-time Hispanic voters to the ballot
box last November, flipping four states
from red to blue.
Hayworth even published a book during
his last Congressional election (did we
mention that he lost) entitled,
""Whatever It Takes: Illegal
Immigration, Border Security, and the
War on Terror."
In the notorious manifesto, Hayworth
praised the cultural views of notorious
anti-Semite, Henry Ford. He also
proposed a three-year ban on legal
immigration from Mexico. After the book
was published, The Forward noted in his
book," Hayworth wrote, 'Talk like that
today and our liberal elites will brand
you a cultural imperialist, or worse.
But if you ask me, Ford had a better
idea.'" If you ask just about anyone
else, Ford's ideas were extreme for his
era, but, in the 21st century, it's hard
to find anyone, beside Hayworth and his
ilk, who agree them.
Here's the good news: after years of an
increasingly acerbic tussle over which
politician could be more obnoxious on
immigration, the vast majority of voters
want a real solution. Hispanic voters
are sick of being slapped around by the
pundit profiteers in Congress and on the
airwaves.
The pressure is on the Democrats to
deliver progressive and comprehensive
immigration reform
—
and on Republicans to stop the bleeding.
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