U.S. Republicans try to out-Trump each other with tough border rhetoric
ahead of election
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[February 14, 2022]
By Ted Hesson and Alexandra Ulmer
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In the past year,
Texas Governor Greg Abbott has deployed thousands of National Guard
troops to the southern U.S. border, begun building a new border barrier,
and arrested migrants for allegedly trespassing on private property.
The two-term Republican governor has taken the lead in opposing
Democratic President Joe Biden's immigration reforms, earning him an
endorsement by former President Donald Trump.
But as Abbott runs for a third term, conservative candidates challenging
him in a March 1 Republican nominating contest contend he is still not
tough enough on illegal immigration.
Allen West, a former Republican U.S. congressman, says Texas should
arrest and deport immigrants who enter the United States illegally -
something states do not have the power to do - if the federal government
refuses to act. The "porous border" shows how Abbott's approach has
failed, West argues.
Don Huffines, a businessman and former state senator, wants to close
Texas' bridges with Mexico to most inbound traffic and deploy the
entirety of the state's National Guard to the border.
Abbott spokesperson Renae Eze rejected criticism of the governor's
immigration record, saying that Texas had been forced to step up after
Biden "abdicated" his responsibilities to safeguard the border.
While opinion polls show Abbott has a sizable lead over both West and
Huffines, he will likely face the most competitive gubernatorial primary
of his career. The attacks from his right flank show how even the
staunchest Republican border hawks face pressure to be ever more
stringent on the issue in the run-up to the election.
Trump rewrote the party's immigration playbook after he successfully
campaigned in 2016 on building a border wall and blocking the entry of
refugees, often employing nativist language to describe his goals. The
current election cycle shows Trump's influence persists even after
losing the presidency in 2020 - and that some candidates are going
further.
"No issue grabs the attention of Republicans like immigration and border
security do," said James Henson, director of the Texas Politics Project
at the University of Texas. Republican primary voters have a seemingly
"unlimited appetite" for tough immigration measures, Henson added.
CALLS FOR MORE ACTION
Some 68% of Republicans in Texas say border security or immigration are
the top issues facing the state, according to an October 2021 University
of Texas poll. And while Republicans broadly approve of Abbott's
immigration policies, according to surveys, the polling suggests they
want even more action.
The tougher border proposals pushed by Abbott's challengers demonstrate
how Republican candidates are trying to out-Trump each other on an issue
that remains a powerful galvanizing force for the party's primary
voters, despite economic issues and tensions around COVID policies
dominating headlines.
And for Republicans in competitive primaries, a tough stance on
immigration is a way to differentiate themselves without risking
backlash from voters, said Alex Conant, a Republican strategist.
Republicans across the country have made immigration a major focus
heading into the Nov. 8 congressional election, where Democrats risk
losing control of Congress, stymieing Biden's legislative agenda.
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Texas Governor Greg Abbott speaks during a rally, in Conroe, Texas,
U.S., January 29, 2022. REUTERS/Go Nakamura/File Photo
Candidates can tap into voter
outrage over record-high attempted border crossings and the cost of
providing public services to migrants, a message amplified by the
country's popular conservative media like Fox News.
Liberal advocacy groups say Republicans are
demonizing migrants who come to the United States seeking refuge,
distorting the economic effects of immigration, and trying to
capitalize on xenophobic fears over the fate of the country's white
majority.
'EVERY STATE IS A BORDER STATE'
As Republican candidates work to burnish their hardline immigration
credentials, some are turning to Stephen Miller, the architect of
Trump's restrictive immigration agenda.
Miller is formally advising Republican hedge fund CEO David
McCormick in his campaign for a U.S. Senate seat in Pennsylvania and
informally speaking with other candidates, he told Reuters.
McCormick last week visited the Arizona town of Yuma near the
Mexican border - some 2,400 miles (3,900 km) from Pennsylvania's
capital Harrisburg. "Every state is a border state when Joe Biden
and his administration incentivize illegal immigration," he said in
a written statement.
In Arizona, Kari Lake, the Trump-endorsed Republican frontrunner for
governor, agrees with Texas' border crackdown but has vowed to go
further.
Lake, a former Fox News anchor, wants to forge an alliance among
like-minded states to deport immigrants in the United States
illegally, which is a federal responsibility.
Some Republican primary candidates are even taking aim at legal
immigration, once a major plank of the party's pro-business stance.
"We need to have a full immigration moratorium," said Trump-endorsed
Joe Kent, an Army veteran running in a Washington state primary
against U.S. Representative Jaime Herrera Beutler. Kent says too
many tech jobs are being taken by H-1B visa holders, a
skilled-worker program whose recipients are majority Indian.
It remains to be seen if enough voters will back the hardliners.
Lake narrowly leads the field of Republican candidates for Arizona
governor. McCormick entered the race for the U.S. Senate seat in
Pennsylvania about a month ago and public polling has yet to gauge
his standing.
Analysts say Washington's voting system, where candidates of all
parties appear on the primary ballot together and the top two
vote-winners advance to the general, will favor moderates like
Herrera Beutler.
Nonetheless, NumbersUSA, a hawkish advocacy group that pushes for
lower levels of immigration, said it had received more responses
than usual to an election-year survey it conducts among candidates
to rate them on their hardline immigration stances - suggesting
candidates are eager to establish their Trump-esque credentials.
"A couple years ago it used to be, 'Legal immigration good, illegal
immigration bad.' That used to be the Republican mantra," said
Deputy Director Chris Chmielenski. "You're starting to see less of
that."
(Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington and Alexandra Ulmer in San
Francisco; Editing by Ross Colvin and Rosalba O'Brien)
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