Jan. 22, 2008

Are McCain's Border Blues Over?

Weekly Standard: S.C. Win Shows Immigration Is No Longer A Driving Issue

  • Republican presidential hopeful, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., right, gives a double thumbs-up to the crowd during a watch party campaign event at The Citadel, in Charleston, S.C., Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008.

    Republican presidential hopeful, Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., right, gives a double thumbs-up to the crowd during a watch party campaign event at The Citadel, in Charleston, S.C., Saturday, Jan. 19, 2008.  (AP)

  • Play CBS Video Video A Look At The Primaries

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  • Video McCain Wins In South Carolina

    Sen. John McCain continued his surge to the head of the Republican pack with a narrow victory over Mike Huckabee in the South Carolina GOP Primary. CBS News' Karen Brown reports.

  • Video Romney's Misstep May Cost

    During Saturday's GOP debate, Mitt Romney denied comparing John McCain's immigration policy to amnesty. But two of Romney's ads make that comparison. Kelly Cobiella reports.

  • Photo Essay John McCain

    Some call him a hero, some a maverick. Will Americans call him Mr. President?

  • Interactive Immigration And Naturalization

    Who's coming to America? Find out what's being done to screen for terrorists and take a citizenship quiz.

(Weekly Standard)  This column was written by Duncan Currie.

In 2007, much of America's political oxygen was consumed by the two I-words: Iraq and immigration. If the former was supposed to boost John McCain's GOP primary campaign, the latter was supposed to torpedo it. Not only did the Arizona senator favor a relatively liberal immigration policy, he had cosponsored legislation with left-wing lion Ted Kennedy to establish a temporary worker program and offer millions of illegal immigrants a path to citizenship. In the summer of 2005, the cover of National Review had assailed McCain as "Amnesty John." In the late spring and early summer of 2007, McCain supported a comprehensive immigration reform bill that provoked furious opposition from conservative talk radio and the Republican base. It nearly destroyed his presidential bid.

But McCain survived the immigration debate and eventually climbed back into the race. He won the New Hampshire primary, and now he has triumphed in one of the most conservative states in the Union.

South Carolina is not a border state. But according to one estimate, the number of illegal immigrants living there jumped by a whopping 1,000 percent between 1990 and 2004. It is now "estimated at between 150,000 and 400,000," the Guardian reports. (The overall population of South Carolina is about 4.4 million.) Just before the primary, the Guardian quoted Francis Marion University political scientist Neal Thigpen as saying, "This is the new Confederate flag issue in South Carolina on the Republican side." A recent Goldman Sachs study notes that South Carolina's Hispanic population "grew almost 7 percent per year from 2000 to 2007," which ranked among "the fastest rates in the country." (The number of Hispanics "grew from a small base in 2000," Goldman added, "but we expect continued rapid expansion.")

According to the CNN exit poll numbers, 26 percent of GOP primary voters in South Carolina said that illegal immigration was the most important issue, compared to 40 percent who said the economy, 16 percent who said Iraq, and 15 percent who said terrorism. Overall, 47 percent of voters said the best way to handle illegal immigrants is either to give them a path to citizenship (28 percent) or to implement a temporary worker scheme (19 percent). A plurality (44 percent) of those favoring a path to citizenship voted for McCain, as did a plurality (37 percent) of those endorsing a temporary worker program. No surprises there.

But here's the interesting part: Among the majority (52 percent) of voters who said the best way to handle illegal immigrants is to "deport them," 26 percent went for McCain while only 19 percent went for Fred Thompson and 15 percent went for Mitt Romney. A plurality (34 percent) went for Mike Huckabee, who has taken a sharp right turn on the issue. But McCain (24 percent) beat both Thompson (21 percent) and Romney (16 percent) among the 26 percent of voters who said illegal immigration was the most important issue. This despite Romney's repeated efforts to paint McCain as soft on illegals, despite Thompson's embrace of a more hardline position, and despite the last-minute warning from Jim DeMint, South Carolina's popular GOP senator, that "we cannot afford to have a president who has fought for amnesty for illegal immigrants."

Illegal immigration does not currently dominate the front pages, cable chat shows, and political blogs the way it did in mid-2007. This helped McCain. But he has also recalibrated his message, emphasizing border security first and denying (somewhat disingenuously) that he ever supported "amnesty." Unlike in 2000, observes Byron York of National Review, McCain had the backing of a large portion of South Carolina's GOP establishment. He ran even with Huckabee (32 percent to 32 percent) among voters who said the economy was the most important issue, held a narrow edge (33 percent to 30 percent) among voters who ranked terrorism first, and won big (52 percent to 24 percent) among voters who said Iraq was most important.

McCain dominated among liberals and moderates - who compromised less than a third of all primary voters - but he also beat Thompson and Romney among self-described conservatives, winning 26 percent to Thompson's 19 percent and Romney's 16 percent. McCain even topped Huckabee, albeit barely, among the narrower group of "somewhat conservative" voters, winning a 32 percent plurality to Huckabee's 30 percent.

The electorate was heavily pro-Bush: 52 percent of voters said they were "satisfied" with the administration, while 17 percent said they were "enthusiastic" about it. And yet President Bush, like McCain, has vocally championed a path to citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants. Curiously, among the 17 percent of "enthusiastically" pro-Bush voters, McCain won a plurality (34 percent). But he also won pluralities among the 25 percent of voters who said they were "dissatisfied" with the Bush administration and among the 5 percent who said they were "angry" with it.

A plurality (43 percent) of voters reckoned that McCain stood the best chance of winning the general election in November. Among this group, more than two-thirds (69 percent) voted for the Arizona senator. Yet only 6 percent of all voters said that "electability" was the top quality they were looking for in a candidate. However, McCain won an overwhelming majority (67 percent) of the 23 percent who ranked "experience" as their top quality, and he carried a plurality (34 percent) of the 26 percent who most wanted a candidate who "says what he believes." Crucially, McCain won a plurality (44 percent) among the 46 percent of voters who said "personal qualities" were more important to their vote than "issues."

To be sure, McCain trailed behind both Huckabee and Thompson among "very conservative" voters, winning 19 percent to Huckabee's 41 percent and Thompson's 22 percent. That mirrored his poor showing among strong conservatives in New Hampshire. But McCain benefited from the four-way race with Huckabee, Thompson, and Romney. "If there had been just a single 'conservative' candidate to oppose him" in South Carolina, notes RealClearPolitics blogger Jay Cost, "McCain might have lost."

True enough. He is still a long way from securing the GOP nomination, and many Republicans still distrust him. Among other influential conservatives, Rush Limbaugh has been hammering away at the Arizona senator and predicting that a McCain nomination would "destroy the Republican party." Former GOP lawmakers Tom DeLay and Rick Santorum have publicly blasted him. McCain may yet stumble. But the results in South Carolina, one of the reddest states on the map, suggest that his immigration record is not the insurmountable obstacle it appeared to be last year.

By Duncan Currie
© Copyright 2008, News Corporations, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.



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by perception5 January 23, 2008 4:20 PM EST
Attention Weekly Standard

We don''t want McCain as the GOP nominee!

We want the most qualified candidate running from either party.

We want Mitt Romney, ............GO MITT ! aka Mr. Economy and Mr. Fixer......
Reply to this comment
by davidlar2 January 23, 2008 1:47 PM EST
One reads periodically in conservative circles about a 10 year moratorium on legal immigration. Do these people realize what an unmitigated disaster this would be for the US economy as a whole, especially for high tech industries given that we don''t educate very many scientists and engineers in this country? With current immigration laws, recruiting scientists in this country is extremely difficult- I speak from experience. And that ignores the issue of wanting to hire the best the world has to offer for a research position, not just someone who might be good enough to perform at a minimal level.
Reply to this comment
by frankinaz January 23, 2008 12:56 PM EST
Immigration is not a driving issue; ILLEGAL immigration is the driving issue! The Southwest is turning into a third world country. Yet John McCain and other leaders refuse to enact legislation tough enough to end this problem, and the Federal Government will not enforce it''s laws. It''s time to elect leaders of this country that will end illegal immigration for the rest of time.
Reply to this comment
by m4surveys January 23, 2008 10:22 AM EST
Uh, the "plot" to flood the southwest with Illegals is real. See: http://www.americanpatrol.com/ for more!
Reply to this comment
by m4surveys January 23, 2008 9:08 AM EST
Phhhtttt! S.C. means little in the Illegal Immigrant battle. Wait till he gets to the border states, CA, AZ, NM, TX, CO (Tancredo''s home town).

Only Ron Paul has a realistic plan to end Illegal Immigration...
http://www.ronpaul2008.com/issues/border-security-and-immigration-reform/

Reply to this comment
by m4surveys January 23, 2008 9:05 AM EST
Phhhtttt! S.C. means little in the Illegal Immigrant battle. Wait till he gets to the border states, CA, AZ, NM, TX, CO (Tancredo''s home town).
Reply to this comment
by noloyalisti January 22, 2008 8:01 PM EST
Don''t forget bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb, bomb Iran. That was so funny. This guys is a scary flip flopping conservative who like the rest of them could care less about the human race. It''s all about what they can get for themselves.
Reply to this comment
by imnho January 22, 2008 3:57 PM EST
I wonder if the weekly standard realizes that if Iran heats up again John McCain''s postion on immigration won''t matter.
Reply to this comment

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