Democratic candidates painted a stark picture for Latino voters on Tuesday night: If they want to see a pro-immigrant president in the White House, they will have to run far, far away from the Republican Party.
Donald Trump was the clear target of choice in “Us vs. Them” strategy. When given a chance to dog-pile on the Republican presidential front-runner, candidates leapt at the chance. Former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley called Trump the “carnival barker of the Republican Party.” Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton criticized candidates who “demonized hardworking immigrants” and “insulted” them.
There is little daylight that separates top Democratic candidates on immigration issues. The question was not whether candidates support a pathway to citizenship for the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the United States, but whether those people qualify for the Affordable Care Act and instate college tuition. Instead, talk of immigration at Tuesday night’s first Democratic debate underlined the gaping divide between the two parties on the issue.
“On this stage you didn’t hear anyone denigrate women. You didn’t hear anyone make racist comments about new Americans. You didn’t hear anyone speak ill because of a religious belief,” O’Malley said in his closing statements.
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Immigration is also a point a some vulnerability for Sanders. He has in the past held a complicated, if not lukewarm, view of comprehensive immigration reform, having come out against legislative efforts in 2007. Though he now says he supports an immigration overhaul, he has expressed concerns that undocumented immigrants entering the workforce would depress wages, a theory that has been disproven.
“I didn’t leave anybody at the altar. I voted against that piece of legislation because it had guest-worker provisions in it which the Southern Poverty Law Center talked about being semi-slavery,” Sanders said Tuesday night.
Tuesday’s debate was critical for candidates to win over the home crowd in Nevada, an early caucus state with a growing Latino population that has helped the it swing blue. It was also an opportunity for O’Malley to break out of the pack after polling nationwide at barely 1%. He had championed a fairly consistent, pro-immigrant stance throughout his two terms as governor of Maryland. It comes in contrast with Clinton, who has evolved over the years. She very notably stumbled during a debate back in 2007 when asked if she supported granting drivers’ licenses to undocumented immigrants.
When pressed on whether she agreed with O’Malley in extending the Affordable Care Act to undocumented immigrants and their children, Clinton said she was open to the idea of allowing people to buy into the exchanges, but would limit some of the subsidies.








