Ross Douthat is making sense. The politics of immigration are
complicated by two factors: hyperventilating restrictionists who
wildly exaggerate the salience of the issue and the ease with which
supporters of the McCain-Kennedy approach can offer meaningless
rhetorical concessions to immigration-hawk voters during campaigns.
But that doesn't mean that the immigration issue is irrelevant or
that the "comprehensive" reform position is popular just because
John McCain gets more votes than, say, Tom Tancredo. Tancredo isn't
a McCain-quality politician and McCain didn't run on McCain-Kennedy
in the primaries.
topics:
John McCain, Immigration