Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Democrats cave on the Dreamers

I try to be optimistic. But Monday's concession by the Democrats looks like a real defeat to me. And possibly one with serious long-term consequences.

The Dreamers' fight isn't over, by any means. We're talking about 800,000 or more people who have been officially recognized by Congress and the previous White House as being Americans in all but name, having been brought to the US as children and having grown up here as part of American society. They don't need to "integrated," a popular buzzword on immigration in Europe. They're already Americans in realty. It's the cynical immigration system the US has maintained for decades that "segregates" them as technically non-citizens.

Deporting 800,000 or more Latinos who had been covered by DACA and have been effectively members of American society for most of their lives would be a barbaric act.

Today's Democrats have no problem condemning putting Japanese-Americans in prison camps (yes, it's legitimate to call them concentration camps) or the Trail of Tears Indian removal, both under Democratic Presidents of yesteryear. But will they go to the wall to stop this? They didn't on Monday.

I hope someone reminds the weenie caucus of Joe Manchin and Dick Durbin and others that the "sweep" they're all counting on in November depends on a large turnout from Latino voters, who are looking at having 800,000 of their friends and relatives soon deported out their home country.

And if the Trumpists get away with that, Trump also promised to exile all 12 million or so undocumented residents. Rick Perlstein warned in Donald Trump and the “F-Word” Washington Spectator 09/30/2015:
Trump has now provided more “specifics” about his immigration plan: a forced population transfer greater than any attempted in history, greater than the French and Spanish expulsions of the Jews in 1308 and 1492; greater than the Nabka of approximately 700,000 Palestinian Arabs from British-mandate Palestine; greater than the 1.5 million Stalin consigned to Siberia and the Central Asian republics; greater than Pol Pot’s exile of 2.5 million city-dwellers to the Cambodian countryside, or the scattering of Turkey’s Assyrian Christians, which the scholar Mordechai Zaken says numbers in the millions and required 180 years to complete. Trump has promised to move 12 million Mexicans in under two years––“so fast your head will spin.”
Depending on how you define it, the mass expulsion of ethnic Germans from eastern Europe after the Second World War involved around 12 million.

Neither an initial expulsion of 800,000 or a subsequent exile of 12 million is something any decent person could want to see happen. Even aside from the fact that it would mean a catastrophic collapse in US agriculture and the construction industry.

Monday's DACA cave-in seems like a new edition of the "Gang of 14" show the Democrats staged in 2005 as a cover for caving in on filibustering Shrub Bush's awful judicial nominees. (Carolyn Lochhead, Senate ends filibuster for judicial nominee SFGate.com 05/24/2005) They basically gave the Republicans everything they wanted in exchange for a vague and meaningless concession.

And I don't call hearing any Democratic leader make the argument that Josh Marshall spells out here (Stop Whining, Move Forward TPM 01/23/2018): "If your takeaway here is that Democrats were trying to shut down the government what you’re really saying is that Democrats must vote yes on any continuing resolution no matter what is contained in it. That is obviously an untenable position. What we’re losing sight of here is that, yes, Republicans control the entire federal government. This amounted to legislative hostage taking in reverse."

But Josh is taking an optimistically Mugwump position on whether the Democrats blew it Monday. "They will have the same leverage and, critically, face the same decisions in three weeks as they did over this weekend." That's true. But so is the reverse. They had the same leverage yesterday they will have in three weeks.

So far, Monday's surrender seems very similar. Charlie Pierce wasn't impressed with Monday's performance (The Question Is Simple: Do You Trust Mitch McConnell? Esquire Politics Blog 01/22/2018):
Not to harsh the mellow of Susan Collins, but it’s going to be very interesting to see exactly when this whole thing falls apart. (The same goes for Senator Joe Manchin, whose “tough-guy moderate” act is getting older than the Appalachians. Who precisely belongs to what Manchin refers to as “the far-left” of his party that so pressured him? Almost a million Dreamers who are still in limbo?) President John Kelly or co-President Stephen Miller could step in and put the kibosh on it. The Freedom Caucus whackadoos in the House could yank on the choke-collar they have on Speaker Paul Ryan, the zombie-eyed granny starver from the state of Wisconsin. Or Mitch McConnell simply could be bullshitting the entire nation, again. (I’m going to wait to hear Merrick Garland’s opinion on that one before making any final judgment.) My money remains on the insane monkey asylum on the other side of the Capitol. Those people could screw up a one-car funeral if you spotted them the hearse, and they have a dozen ways to feed this arrangement into the woodchipper.
The Democrats tried before the shutdown to get the Republicans to pass a measure to continue soldiers' pay during the shutdown, which the Republicans had previously agreed to do under Obama. But the Republicans refused. So once the shutdown approached, they started accusing the Democrats of trying to strand the troops in danger zones without pay. Although it was entirely predictable, the Dems didn't seem to have any pushback ready other than to vaguely blame the Republicans for stranding the troops. The Republicans took the CHIP program hostage, a program popular among Republicans which they would almost certainly have passed anyway. But they were willing to play parliamentary hardball. While the Democrats just said, well, gee, we got the CHIP program funded by throwing the Dreamers under the bus.

But staging political fights is a critical part of politics. The Democrats chose the DACA renewal as a major stand they were willing to make. And I'm afraid it will look to the general public and to Latino voters a lot like it looks to me: that they weren't serious about the DACA renewal, but they do hope to cruise to a "sweep" in November based on their pretense of caring about it.

And even if Mitch McConnell keeps his word this time, it's useless unless the Orange Man-Child in the Oval Office signs it. So the only real leverage they have is to be willing to impose another shutdown in three weeks.

The Democrats staged this fight over the past week without being ready to fight it. The outcome so far is bad.

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