Know Nothings, Switzerland and the 2008 Election


America is currently going through yet another of its cycles of high immigration followed by nativism. Although his presidential campaign is going nowhere fast, U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo has managed nonetheless to attract a few headlines with his extreme anti-immigrant rhetoric:

"Look at what has happened to Miami. It has become a Third World country. You just pick it up and take it and move it someplace. You would never know you're in the United States of America. You would certainly say you're in a Third World country," Tancredo said.

Less widely reported is that Tancredo received a standing ovation at the Family Research Council so-called "Values Voters Summit" in DC this past weekend when he tried out the same line according to someone I know who attended. The right-wing National Review bloggers seemed to miss that particular sound bite though they discuss other glorious moments in Tancredo's speech here and here. Suffice it to say that it is a good thing Mary and Joseph didn't look for shelter in Tancredo's manger.



While Tancredo will not get far in his quest to be the next Millard Fillmore, the Washington Post reports that the desperate Republicans are likely to turn to anti-immigration as a theme in the 2008 elections. They've certainly done it before. Pete Wilson won reelection as governor of California in 1994 by running against illegal immigrants. His campaign commercials showed immigrants sneaking over the border with the voiceover saying "They keep coming and coming."

Pete Wilson won one more term but alienated Latinos permanently. The share of Latinos registering as Republicans dropped to near zero and California Latinos became a loyal Democratic voting bloc. In contrast, at the same time, the Republican governor of another state with a large Latino population reached out to Latinos and dramatically increased his share of the Latino vote. His name? George W. Bush.

Of course, as President, Bush did not choose to act on immigration under his popularity was in the toilet and he couldn't get immigration reform through Congress. Even so, Bush is positively progressive on the issue compared to many of his fellow partisans. My guess is that this is one aspect of the Bush legacy that Republicans will choose not to embrace.

Immigration doesn't just roil American politics. There were riots in the capital of Switzerland (yes, really) over this question during their recent election campaign. The Swiss People's Party has gradually risen from the fourth to first largest party in the land by combining opposition to the EU with opposition to immigration. Their election propaganda in the recent campaign showed three white sheep kicking a black sheep off of a Swiss flag.

Efforts to make it easier for people to naturalize have failed in Switzerland. In 2003, a major of Swiss voted against making it simpler for third-generation Swiss who resided legally in the country to gain Swiss citizenship. Over one-fifth of Swiss residents are not Swiss citizens so the high number of non-citizens remains a bit problem.

Perhaps we should be thankful that the 14th Amendment, which says that all people born in this country are citizens of the United States by right, prevents immigration from being a multi-generational nightmare here. While only a relatively slim majority of Latinos are citizens, over four-fifths of Latinos under age 18 are citizens. Latinos are also the fastest growing group of voters in the country. Republicans should consider that fact before they turn 2008 into our big immigrant bashing election.

(Cross-posted on Maryland Politics Watch)


David Lublin October 23, 2007 - 8:16am

in Holland, radical views about Muslims are on the increase as well. The Turkish Muslims have always lived harmoniously with the Dutch. The problem seems to be with the Moroccans who refuse to integrate and are responsible for the majority of crimes. What to do? More people are saying expel them all.

adrena October 23, 2007 - 8:37am

What do you do when you have a group of immigrants who refuse to adopt your tolerant attitudes - the very tolerant attitudes that you took towards them when they first arrived.

Beto October 24, 2007 - 10:35am

I'm Cuban and I was raised in Hialeah. I visited my family last month. S. FL isn't a slice of heaven, there good areas and bad areas, but it's no "TWC". People like Tancredo don't know what the hell it's like to squirrel away airline food because there may be a food shortage in the USA. People in TWCs wish they could sample the ethnic food S. FL is known for, even if they're served by scary swarthy people with scary accents.

And the idiot keeps it up. Great.

Lesly October 23, 2007 - 10:32am

those black beans?

http://mauberly.blogspot.com/

mauberly October 23, 2007 - 6:16pm

Con arroz y pollo? ;)

Lesly October 24, 2007 - 8:26am

what I'm talking about.

http://mauberly.blogspot.com/

mauberly October 24, 2007 - 10:35am

...all theose construction cranes and six-figure condos are a real pisser in the Third World.

Steve 2.0 October 24, 2007 - 1:33am

is that many of these migrations are caused by combinations of climate change, too many people in relation to arable amounts of land, and scarcity of vital natural resources.

Economists and politicians can't fix everything.

I did inhale.

Don October 28, 2007 - 6:25pm

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