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Republicans Stir Populist Anxiety
against Health-Care to reduce
Immigration as Leading Xenophobic
Effort to Lower Number of Hispanics
in the United States
WASHINGTON (By Spencer S. Hsu,
Washington Post)
―
September 17, 2009 As Congress's
debate over health-care legislation
lumbers toward a defining test for the
Obama presidency, partisans on both
sides of another issue ― immigration ―
escalated their own proxy war this week,
concluding the fates of the two issues
have become politically linked.
Trying to beat back a furor over whether
President Obama's centerpiece initiative
would subsidize health care for illegal
immigrants, liberal supporters of an
immigration overhaul on Monday called a
main proponent of that claim a "hate
group," citing its founder's ties to
white supremacists and interest in
racist ideas, such as eugenics.
The counterattack comes as opponents of
illegal immigration plan a Capitol Hill
lobbying push, starting when 47
conservative radio hosts hold a "town
hall of the airwaves" in Washington on
Tuesday and Wednesday to highlight the
costs of illegal immigration.
Strategists on both sides said the clash
underscores how Republican activists
have stirred populist anxiety against
not only Obama's health-care effort but
also other parts of his agenda, and how
core Democratic groups have concluded
that it is time to return fire.
In an ad published in the Capitol Hill
newspaper Roll Call and a teleconference
with reporters, America's Voice, an
umbrella group of immigrant advocacy
organizations, accused the Federation
for American Immigration Reform, a prime
lobby for reduced immigration, of
leading xenophobic efforts to lower the
number of Hispanic people in the United
States.
Allies of America's Voice, including
leaders of the National Council of La
Raza, a Latino civil rights group, and
Media Matters, a news watchdog group,
alleged that FAIR and related
organizations play on nativist, racially
charged fears to drown out debate.
"The Federation for American Immigration
Reform (FAIR) is designated a HATE GROUP
by the Southern Poverty Law Center," the
ad reads, citing a December 2007 listing
by an independent group based in
Montgomery, Ala., that monitors racist
organizations. "Extremist groups, like
FAIR, shouldn't write immigration
policy," the ad concludes.
Dan Stein, president of FAIR, called
attacks on the group's founder, John
Tanton, false and outdated.
"Saying something that's not true or
telling a lie 50 times doesn't make it
more true than the first," Stein said,
noting that the SPLC began its attacks
earlier this decade. "They've decided to
engage in unsubstantiated, invidious
name-calling, smearing millions of
people in this movement who simply want
to see the law enforced and, frankly,
lower levels of immigration," Stein
said.
Ongoing Attacks
Supporters of immigration reform usually
stopped short of such blunt attacks when
Congress debated the issue in 2006 and
2007.
Frank Sharry, executive director of
America's Voice, said conservative
activists have been trying to intimidate
Congress by tapping into a thin but
vocal vein of populist anger. Sharry
acknowledged that the best scenario for
a successful legalization push would be
"a comeback victory for health-care
reform." Obama has said he will turn to
immigration next after energy
legislation.
"We didn't call them out last time, we
thought we were in a political debate.
Now we realize it's part political
debate and . . . part culture war,"
Sharry said. "These talk-show guys and
FAIR, this isn't about immigration
policy, as much as they think there are
way too many Latinos in this country and
they want to get rid of a couple of
million of them."
Mark Krikorian, executive director of
the Center for Immigration Studies, a
think tank spun off FAIR, said Obama and
congressional Democrats have lost
credibility in the dispute over health
coverage for illegal immigrants and
probably were surprised by its
intensity.
"Right now there are a lot of members of
Congress who might have thought the
immigration issue wasn't as hot for
opponents as it was a couple of years
ago," Krikorian said. "They were
disabused of that notion."
Focus on FAIR Founder
Republican Rep. Joe Wilson's shout of
"You lie!" during Obama's speech to
Congress last Wednesday night dramatized
the dispute, in which critics say
Democrats are not doing enough to verify
that illegal immigrants will not receive
expanded health coverage at taxpayers'
expense. The White House said Obama's
plan would tighten restrictions and
require more verification of legal
residency. Supporters say research
indicates that abuse is rare, that
enforcement costs outweigh savings and
that U.S. citizens may be improperly
denied help.
In a series of reports, the Southern
Poverty Law Center and the
Anti-Defamation League have focused on
Tanton, who founded FAIR in 1979. The
groups quote from Tanton's
correspondence with Holocaust deniers
and white nationalist thinkers, his
expressed interest in anti-Semitic
writers and the study of eugenics, and
concerns about the "educability" of
Hispanics and the loss of a "European
American" majority.
"We want to keep that drumbeat going so
politicians know when FAIR lobbyists
speak to them, this is who they
represent," said Heidi Beirich, an SPLC
researcher.
Stein defended FAIR's track record,
cited its diverse membership and said
the group "stands four-square against
discrimination based on race, ethnicity
or religion." He said attacks on Tanton
are taken out of context and "simply do
not reflect the true character of the
person," whom Stein described as a
"Jeffersonian or Renaissance man or
intellect" whose interest and writings
span a wide range of issues.
He criticized America's Voice and allied
groups as "juvenile mud throwers who
seem unprepared to engage in serious
public debate."
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