Why Republicans Can't Stop Pissing Off Hispanics, Women, and Young People
By
Robert Reich, cross-posted from
his website
What are the three demographic groups whose
electoral impact is growing fastest? Hispanics, women, and young people.
Who are Republicans pissing off the most? Latinos, women, and young
people.
It’s almost as if the GOP can’t help itself.
Start with Hispanic voters, whose electoral heft keeps growing as
they comprise an ever-larger portion of the electorate. Hispanics now
favor President Obama over Romney by more than two to one, according to a
recent
Pew poll.
The movement of Hispanics into the Democratic camp has been going on
for decades. What are Republicans doing to woo them back? Replicating
California Republican Governor Pete Wilson’s disastrous support almost
twenty years ago for Proposition 187 – which would have screened out
undocumented immigrants from public schools, health care, and other
social services, and required law-enforcement officials to report any
“suspected” illegals. (Wilson, you may remember, lost that year’s
election, and California’s Republican Party has never recovered.)
The Arizona law now before the Supreme Court – sponsored by
Republicans in the state and copied by Republican legislators and
governors in several others – would authorize police to stop anyone
looking Hispanic and demand proof of citizenship. It’s nativism
disguised as law enforcement.
Romney is trying to distance himself from that law, but it’s not
working. That may be because he dubbed it a “model law” during
February’s Republican primary debate in Arizona, and because its author
(former state senator Russell Pearce, who was ousted in a special
election last November largely by angry Hispanic voters) says he’s
working closely with Romney advisers.
Hispanics are also reacting to Romney’s attack just a few months ago
on GOP rival Texas Governor Rick Perry for supporting in-state tuition
at the University of Texas for children of undocumented immigrants. And
to Romney’s advocacy of what he calls “self-deportation” – making life
so difficult for undocumented immigrants and their families that they
choose to leave.
As if all this weren’t enough, the GOP has been pushing voter ID laws
all over America, whose obvious aim is to intimidate Hispanic voters so
they won’t come to the polls. But they may have the opposite effect –
emboldening the vast majority of ethnic Hispanics, who are American
citizens, to vote in even greater numbers and lend even more support to
Obama and other Democrats.
Or consider women – whose political and economic impact in America
continues to grow (women are fast becoming better educated than men and
the major breadwinners in American homes). The political gender gap is
huge. According to recent
polls, women prefer Obama to Romney by over 20 percent.
So what is the GOP doing to woo women back? Attacking them. Last
February, House Republicans voted to cut off funding to Planned
Parenthood. Last May, they unanimously passed the “No Taxpayer Funding
for Abortion Act,” banning the District of Columbia from funding
abortions for low-income women. (The original version removed all
exceptions – rape, incest, and endangerment to a mother’s life – except
“forcible” rape.)
Earlier this year Republican legislators in Virginia, Pennsylvania,
Idaho, and Alabama pushed bills requiring women seeking abortions to
undergo invasive vaginal ultrasound tests (Pennsylvania Republicans even
wanted proof such had viewed the images).
Republican legislators in Georgia and Arizona passed bills banning
most abortions after twenty weeks of pregnancy. The Georgia bill would
also require that any abortion after 20 weeks be done in a way to bring
the fetus out alive. Republican legislators in Texas have voted to
eliminate funding for any women’s healthcare clinic with an affiliation
to an abortion provider – even if the affiliation is merely a shared
name, employee, or board member.
All told, over 400 Republican bills are pending in state legislatures, attacking womens’ reproductive rights.
But even this doesn’t seem enough for the GOP. Republicans in
Wisconsin just repealed a law designed to prevent employers from
discriminating against women.
Or, finally, consider students – a significant and growing electoral
force, who voted overwhelmingly for Obama in 2008. What are Republicans
doing to woo them back? Attack them, of course.
Republican Budget Chair Paul Ryan’s budget plan – approved by almost
every House Republican and enthusiastically endorsed by Mitt Romney –
allows rates on student loans to double on July 1 – from 3.4 percent to
6.8 percent. That will add an average of $1,000 a year to student debt
loads, which already exceed credit-card debt.
House Republicans say America can’t afford the $6 billion a year it
would require to keep student loan rates down to where they are now. But
that same Republican plan gives wealthy Americans trillions of dollars
in tax cuts over the next decade. (Under mounting political pressure,
House Republicans have come up with just enough money to keep the loan
program going for another year – safely past Election Day – by raiding a
fund established for preventive care in the new health-care act.)
Here again, Romney is trying to tiptoe away from the GOP position. He
now says he supports keeping student loans where they were. Yet only a
few months ago he argued that subsidized student loans were bad because
they encouraged colleges to raise their tuition.
How can a political party be so dumb as to piss off Hispanics, women,
and young people? Because the core of its base is middle-aged white men
– and it doesn’t seem to know how to satisfy its base without at the
same time turning off everyone who’s not white, male, and middle-aged.
Robert Reich is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley. He writes a blog at www.robertreich.org. His most recent book is Beyond Outrage.
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