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Swordsmyth
11-14-2019, 05:10 PM
From 1967 to 2019, Republicans controlled the California governorship for 31 of 52 years. So why is there currently not a single statewide Republican officeholder? California also has a Democratic governor and Democratic supermajorities in both houses of the state legislature. Only seven of California's 53 congressional seats are held by Republicans.
In 1994, then-Gov. Pete Wilson backed Proposition 187, which denied state social services to undocumented immigrants. The spin goes that it backfired, alienated the Hispanic community and thus marked the road to Republican perdition.
Not quite.
Prop 187 passed with 59 percent support. Wilson's endorsement of the bill helped its passage, and his support of it aided his landslide 1994 re-election. Among minority voters, 52 percent of Asian and African American voters supported Proposition 187. Some 27 percent of Latinos voted for it.
Liberal groups immediately sued in federal court. Just three days after the measure passed, a federal judge issued a temporary restraining order preventing Proposition 187 from going into effect. A month later, U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer issued a permanent injunction. Prop 187 never became law.


In effect, two judges nullified the wishes of more than 5 million California voters.
Arnold Schwarzenegger had supported Prop 187. Yet in 2003 he was elected governor. So what caused the Republican demise?
Ironically, radical changes in California demography may have been brought about by Prop 187 -- but not in the way many people think.
The state's population has increased by nearly 10 million in the last quarter century. Yet the growth has been marked by the exodus of some and larger influxes of others.
When Prop 187 passed, there were an estimated 1.5 million undocumented immigrants statewide. In the 25 years since, millions of others have entered the state, and the current number of those still undocumented exceeds 3 million.
Some 27 percent of current California residents were not born in the U.S. Traditionally, first-generation immigrants favor larger, not smaller, government.
A cynic might argue that once a federal judge allowed undocumented immigrants to enjoy the full array of state services and entitlements, there were incentives for millions of other immigrants to enter the U.S. illegally, and California in particular.


Statistics suggest they did just that -- often to the chagrin of Democratic politicians, the United Farm Workers and other liberal groups who worried about the negative effects of illegal immigration on entry-level wages, unionization and poor citizens' access to overtaxed social services.
Oddly, conservative businesspeople were likely to favor permissive immigration policies in hopes of finding an ample supply of low-cost laborers while simultaneously diminishing the power of unions.
A technological revolution sparked a lucrative Silicon Valley renaissance. Suddenly, coastal California became one of the wealthiest corridors in the history of the planet. Big Tech drew in hundreds of thousands of hip young workers eager to come to California and join what was thought to be a global revolution.
Silicon Valley was seen as a uniquely progressive corporate paradise where one could get rich and stay woke all at once. Most techies supported big government, higher taxes and open borders, and had the money and wherewithal to not worry much about the ensuing costs and the catastrophic results for others.


By the turn of the century, the California treasury was relying on the tech industry for an enormous share of the taxes to fund its massive expansion of state services -- and politicians often bowed to Big Tech's political wishes.
As taxes climbed, schools eroded and funds for infrastructure were diverted elsewhere, millions of middle-class Californians fled. The total numbers of this continuing exodus are still in dispute. Many left in despair over climbing gas, sales and income taxes that seemed to worsen rather improve state infrastructure and services.
This tripartite demographic revolution proved disastrous for the Republican Party. The GOP lost much of its base to other states. Many conservative voters left for small-government, low-tax alternatives. Republican efforts to reduce taxes, limit some abortions and fund additional roads and dams had little appeal to the new gentry classes on the coast.
Will there ever again be a viable California Republican Party?
After three decades of radical progressivism, California residents are tiring of one-party straitjacket rule. The hard-liberal order normalized massive power blackouts, the nation's highest array of taxes, the forest mismanagement that fuels deadly fires, an epidemic of homelessness in major cities, eroding schools, ossified infrastructure and soaring energy costs.
The final irony?
Those most hurt -- and growing the most angry -- are the immigrants who once fled to a different California that now no longer exists.

https://pjmedia.com/victordavishanson/what-happened-to-california-republicans/


So the destroyers leave the wreckage behind and move to destroy new places, just as they did when they fled their home countries and infested California.

dannno
11-14-2019, 05:19 PM
But muh freedom to cross an imaginary line that I can cross any time anyway to go on vacation is more important living in muh free country..

Swordsmyth
11-14-2019, 05:22 PM
But muh freedom to cross an imaginary line that I can cross any time anyway to go on vacation is more important living in muh free country..

And it's collectivist to assume that immigrants from communist countries will vote communist.

Anti Globalist
11-14-2019, 10:12 PM
California Republicans don't exist anymore. Just like Illinois Republicans.

Swordsmyth
11-14-2019, 10:16 PM
California Republicans don't exist anymore. Just like Illinois Republicans.
And immigration both legal and illegal is why in the case of Kalifornia.
I wouldn't be surprised to find out it's what caused IllAnnoy too.

Brian4Liberty
11-14-2019, 10:23 PM
Migration. Conservatives have left, and a flood of various leftists and Democrat voters have come.

Brian4Liberty
11-14-2019, 10:24 PM
California Republicans don't exist anymore. Just like Illinois Republicans.

Not entirely in either case. But the urban areas dominate, and those are extremely leftist.

Pauls' Revere
11-14-2019, 10:47 PM
San Francisco is the capital of CA and the 9th circuit court is the supreme law of the land. SF even put up a huge picture of their God Greta Thunberg on one of the buildings.

Anti Federalist
11-15-2019, 03:49 AM
Migration. Conservatives have left, and a flood of various leftists and Democrat voters have come.

Yup.

Displacement.

Done on purpose, and not likely to be reversed any time soon...not in our lifetimes anyway.

Swordsmyth
11-15-2019, 05:02 PM
Yup.

Displacement.

Done on purpose, and not likely to be reversed any time soon...not in our lifetimes anyway.
Sometimes things happen suddenly that nobody saw coming.

Our enemies are afraid that that will happen, that's why their mouthpieces are in full court press mode to deny the truth.