Former President George W. Bush said in 2006 that Americans are “going to have to treat” immigrants with “dignity.” In 2012, then-GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney said the country should “grow our economy by growing legal immigration.” Former President Donald Trump said in 2019 that he wants “people to come into our country in the largest numbers ever, but they have to come in legally.” Party leaders are now singing a different tune.
Trump is promoting the false claim that Haitian immigrants in Springfield, Ohio — in the country legally — are eating their neighbors’ pets. Ohio Sen. JD Vance, Trump’s running mate, has echoed the same rhetoric, saying over the weekend that he’d be willing to “create stories” to get the media to pay more attention to the broader issue of immigration.
To be certain, not all Republicans are singing from the same hymnal. But the growing popularity of conspiracy theories surrounding Springfield underscores a years long shift in rhetoric from underscoring compassionate policies to threatening immigrants in the country legally with deportation.
“I don’t think this kind of rhetoric would have ever been accepted other than in the crassest of ranks” in the pre-Trump GOP, said former Rep. Matt Salmon, R-Ariz. “For the good of the party, that kind of rhetoric was really tapped down and made out to be what it was, ludicrous. I think that a lot of the comments that Trump has made have made the rhetoric more and more extreme over time.”
Yesteryear’s GOP was one where Bush emphasized “compassionate conservatism,” John McCain, the former Arizona senator and 2008 presidential nominee, was a bipartisan negotiator on immigration and the party determined in an autopsy after Romney’s 2012 loss that it needed to have a more welcoming approach to immigration to expand its base.
Trump turned that thinking on its head in 2015 when he launched his presidential campaign by calling some Mexican immigrants “rapists,” vowing to build a border wall and pushing for a ramp up in deportations.