Latino Voters Important in South Carolina

In upstate South Carolina, where many Latinos speak English with a Southern drawl, both parties have reached out to Latino leaders about grooming future candidates. But polls show Republicans' intransigence on immigration has turned many Latinos away from the GOP.

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By Kate Linthicum

Illegal immigration is always a sizzling topic on Tony Beam's conservative call-in radio show in this small Bible Belt city.

"Usually all I have to do is say the word and the phones start ringing," Beam said. Sure enough, the lines lighted up on a recent morning when he mentioned a proposal by Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson to offer work permits to immigrants in the country illegally.

"You have to deport them," seethed a caller named Alex, who dubbed Carson's proposal weak. "They're changing our country."

As Wednesday night's debate showed, such hard-line views among conservative voters have created a stark divide among GOP presidential candidates.

Many Republican leaders had moved to the right on immigration even before Donald Trump made the issue the centerpiece of his campaign. Those who opt for more moderate approaches have faced backlash from the party base. But while Republicans must answer to far-right voters now, they also face a future electoral force _ one just coming into focus in parts of Greenville, a city of about 60,000 nestled in the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains.

In some neighborhoods here, strip malls have been transformed by cafes, carnecerias (meat markets) and hair salons catering to the region's rapidly growing Latino population, which increased 866 percent between 1990 and 2013.

South Carolina's upstate region, where Greenville is located, is a microcosm of the dramatic demographic shift happening across the country, where an estimated 28 million Latinos will be eligible to vote in next year's presidential election.

Although Latinos here and elsewhere share many conservative social values with Republicans, their support for a fix to an immigration system widely viewed as broken is in conflict with a conservative constituency that largely opposes citizenship for immigrants in the country illegally. How Republicans negotiate the competing pressures could determine the outcome of the party's primary and the 2016 general election.

The conflict was visible during the Republican debate, in which Carson, Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio cautiously sought to put some distance between the harsh immigration proposals that have dominated Trump's presidential campaign and their own softer approaches.

"I want to build a wall _ a wall that works," said Trump, who has called for mass deportations and vowed to stop issuing birthright citizenship to children born to mothers in the country without legal status.

"To build a wall, and to deport people ... would cost hundreds of billions of dollars," Bush countered. "It would destroy community life; it would tear families apart."

It was the kind of overture that Republicans like the Rev. Jim Goodroe, the missions director for a network of Southern Baptist churches in upstate South Carolina, would like to hear more of.

"The Republican Party cannot continue to be seen as anti-Hispanic, or it'll eventually be voted out of here," said Goodroe, whose network includes dozens of Latino churches and who supports a path to citizenship for the estimated 11 million immigrants in the country illegally.

But moderate proposals on immigration _ including Bush's plan to offer legal status but not citizenship to many in the U.S. illegally _ turns off conservative party activists like Kerry Wood, who helped found a tea party group in nearby Spartanburg.

"If somebody's not willing to support our border, there's no way I'm voting for them," said Wood, who is leaning toward voting for Trump in South Carolina's important early primary in March.

Wood, who supported a state law that allowed police officers to check the immigration status of people they stopped, said conservatives wouldn't need to worry about the Latino vote if they took a stronger position on immigration. "If they were to give the base what they wanted, they'd turn out in huge numbers," Wood said.

After Republican nominee Mitt Romney lost the 2012 election to President Barack Obama, Republican leaders wrote a postmortem that called for broadening the party's appeal to Latinos, many of whom are religious and embrace conservative social beliefs.

In upstate South Carolina, where many Latinos speak English with a Southern drawl, both parties have reached out to Latino leaders about grooming future candidates, even though Latinos still make up only 2 percent of the state's eligible voters. But polls show Republicans' intransigence on immigration has turned many Latinos away from the GOP.

It's a dilemma faced by 28-year-old Eric Guerrero. An evangelical Christian who plays the guitar at a weekly Spanish-language worship service, Guerrero says he shares many Republican values. He voted for John McCain in 2008 and Romney in 2012 largely because he disagrees with Democrats on abortion and gay marriage.

But Trump's anti-immigrant rhetoric this summer has Guerrero, who was born in Mexico and became a U.S. citizen as a teenager, in a state of limbo.

"I have family who is not legal," he said. "It's hard if you're Hispanic, because you don't want to go against your people."

(c)2015 Los Angeles Times

 

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