JUST THINKIN’ OUT LOUD08.16.16 1:00 AM ET
Trump’s Ideological Vetting Plan Would Banish Most Republicans
Now
The Donald wants “extreme vetting” of foreigners to ensure that they
agree with our values. Got me wondering how many Republicans—and how
many Trump voters—would pass.
Donald Trump is on to something—he
wants “extreme vetting” of immigrants to ensure that they agree with
American values on issues like religious freedom, gender equality and
gay rights. As Trump bluntly put it in his big foreign policy speech
Monday, “Those who do not believe in our Constitution, or who support
bigotry and hatred, will not be admitted for immigration into the
country.”
But why focus on immigrants? Why not follow Trump’s
mantra of “America First” and apply this test to American citizens? Yes,
if you were born here, you had the luck of the draw. Which is a lucky
thing for Trump, because if the test could be applied to natural-born
citizens, the result would be that over half of the Republican Party—and
most of Trump’s voters—would be banned from the United States.
It’s
irony defined to hear the GOP Presidential nominee complain about
discrimination against gays, the lack of equality for women and the need
for religious liberty for all. Republicans have done everything
possible to enact laws to enable discrimination against the LGBT
community, from so-called “religious liberty” legislation to the past
championing state constitutional amendments barring marriage equality.
They have fought equal-pay measures and sought to oppress women. And
they have trampled on religious liberty for Muslim Americans.
Why
don’t we take a look at the views of the rank and file Republicans on
the key issues Trump demanded that any immigrant seeking to enter
America must be vetted on?:
1. Gay Rights. If you don’t support
marriage equality you are not adhering to American values as enshrined
in the U.S. Constitution. It’s that simple. And that’s not just my view
but also the U.S. Supreme Court’s, from the seminal case last year
recognizing marriage equality as the law of the land. There the Court
wrote about same-sex couples: “They ask for equal dignity in the eyes of
the law. The Constitution grants them that right.”
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Well,
where does the GOP stand on this right? A May Pew Poll found only 33
percent of Republicans believe that gay couples should have rights equal
to their heterosexual counterparts. (In contrast, almost 80 percent of
progressives support it.) And people like Ted Cruz have gone as far as
to exclaim that LGBT activists who were simply seeking equal rights were
waging a “jihad” against people of faith.
That means bye-bye to
over 60 percent of the Republican Party, including Trump’s vice
presidential candidate Mike Pence, because they have not embraced
American values of marriage equality.
2. Gender equality. Keep in
mind that current Republican congressional Rep. Jody Hice said that a
woman should run for political office only if her husband consents to it
since husbands have “authority” over their wives. Before you dismiss
Hice’s views as being an exception, he easily won his election in 2014
and was vocally supported by well known conservative Erick Erickson.
What
about on key gender-equality issues? Regarding a women’s right to
control her own body, 59 percent of Republicans believe that abortion
should be illegal in all or most cases. And on equal pay for women, only
14 percent of Republicans support legislation to close the gender pay
gap where women are being paid on average 79 cents for every dollar
their male counterparts receive. (And that number is far worse when the
comparison is white men versus women of color.)
Bottom line:
Gender equality and the Republican rank and file don’t go together. That
flies in the face of the Equal Protection Clause of our Constitution
and again means that under Trump’s own test they shouldn’t be in
America.
3. Religious liberty. Simply put, every American should
have the same right to worship regardless of their faith. But polls show
that Republicans tend to support that concept only if it involves
Christianity, not Islam. For example, a December 2015 poll found 88
percent of Republicans support religious liberty when it comes to
Christianity. But the same poll found almost a third fewer Republicans
support religious liberty for Muslims in America.
Even more
shocking is that a recent poll found that 40 percent of Republicans in
North Carolina want to statutorily ban Islam, meaning it would be a
crime to practice the faith there. And we have seen countless instances
across the nation by Republicans to stop the building of local mosques.
Looks
like Trump’s “extreme vetting” would end up keeping out a huge chunk of
Republicans. They simply don’t subscribe to American values on key
issues such as gay rights, gender equality and religious liberty.
As
Trump declared Monday, “We have to promote the exceptional virtues of
our own way of life—and expecting that newcomers to our society do the
same.” Well, I say why don’t we start with America first and ensure that
Republicans subscribe to those “exceptional virtues”? I think most
Americans would agree that it’s time to fix the problems right here at
home first before focusing to issues beyond our borders.
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
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