Immigration reform was on the verge of death before House Majority Leader Eric Cantor lost on Tuesday, and it’s worse than ever today.
Immigration’s role in Cantor race against primary challenger Dave Brat was complicated. But for the Republican rank-and-file lawmakers who have spent the last year resisting Speaker Boehner’s pleas to address the issue, watching their majority leader lose to an opponent who cast even Cantor’s vague, inconsistent hints at immigration reform as “amnesty” isn’t exactly encouraging.
The immediate impact is on policy. Millions of undocumented immigrants and millions more American citizens in mixed-status families will continue to live in uncertainty; legal immigrants will continue to be stymied by long backlogs; and the border, where a wave of unaccompanied Central American children has created a humanitarian crisis, will not receive an influx of new resources.
But the political impact matters too. Congress would never have taken up immigration reform in 2013 if Republicans weren’t terrified by Hispanic and, to a lesser degree, Asian voters’ growing influence, which reached new heights in President Obama’s re-election campaign. The numbers are stark: not only did Obama win 71% of the Latino vote over Republican Mitt Romney, but Hispanic voters’ share of the electorate could potentially double by 2030 while the GOP’s older white base declines.
Republican pollsters, who have been loudly sounding the alarm on the GOP’s looming demographic problem, are desperately trying to get the party to finish the job on immigration. Ten prominent GOP firms released extensive polling this week sponsored by pro-reform group FWD.us that bore two key points: Latino voters are overwhelmingly prepared to blame the GOP for the failure of immigration reform, and yet GOP voters are more open to reform than they once appeared. Even 62% of “tea party” Republicans favored some kind of legal status for undocumented immigrants.
But while a number of polls, even one in Cantor’s own district, have found immigration reform to be popular with Republicans, the GOP’s most conservative voters are highly skeptical. That skepticism made Republican lawmakers nervous about moving on reform before Cantor’s loss and it’s only going to get worse now.
It’s not just the GOP’s imminent failure to pass legislation that’s so politically dangerous to the party – it’s the manner in which immigration reform is dying.
Republicans have offered a number of scenarios in which the party might fail to pass immigration reform this year but still begin the process of wooing Latino voters back.
Some Republicans, including Cantor himself, suggested that the GOP might pass modest legislation granting legal status to young undocumented immigrants as a possible down payment on broader reform. Others, like Judiciary Committee chairman Rep. Bob Goodlatte, suggested the GOP might clarify its position by passing immigration legislation in the House but waiting for a future (hopefully more Republican) Senate to negotiate a final deal. The Senate has already passed a sweeping reform bill crafted by a bipartisan committee.
Some strategists have suggested Republicans might punt on reform now, then nominate a candidate like Florida Sen. Marco Rubio or former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush in 2016 who’d persuade Latinos that they could sell their party on immigration reform more successfully than a polarizing Democratic president.
In every case, the GOP would blame Democrats for scuttling a big bipartisan deal.
These strategies for saving face with Hispanic voters always seemed like a long shot, especially efforts to deflect responsibility to Democrats. Why would Latino voters’ instinct be to blame the party they overwhelmingly voted for in 2012 instead of the GOP? This week’s FWD.us poll found that 49% of Latino voters were prepared to tag Republicans in Congress with killing reform versus only 11% who would blame Obama and 11% who would blame Democrats.
But after Cantor’s ouster, it’s a moot point. None of these hypothetical scenarios will come to pass. Instead, the GOP is entering the darkest timeline: The party is going to leave the immigration debate in worse shape than they entered it.









