AD

And there’s a real argument to be made today that turbocharging the immigration debate in the final days of the 2018 midterm campaign furthers President Trump’s and the GOP’s goal of energizing a previously unenthusiastic base. Throwing this on top of Brett M. Kavanaugh’s Supreme Court nomination would seem to do the trick — particularly when it comes to winning the red states required to keep the Senate.

AD

But, as Republican pollster Glen Bolger often reminds us, enthusiasm is only part of the battle. And the Senate is only half the battle. There is also real reason to believe that what Trump is doing now could alienate independent voters and maybe even hurt the GOP’s efforts to keep the House. The battleground there, after all, is in red-but-not-quite-so-red territory, and some polls suggests independents and those crucial areas aren’t so fond of Trump’s hard-line immigration stance.

“I would not assume that it’s a positive or a negative,” Bolger said. “This is one of those things where we’re a heck of a lot smarter at midnight or 2 a.m. on election night.”

AD

The most recent Washington Post-ABC News poll this month showed independent voters favored the Democratic Party 48 percent to 32 percent when it comes to handling immigration. That’s an almost complete reversal from 2015, when independents favored Republicans 43 percent to 27 percent.

AD

Similarly, a July Washington Post-Schar School poll of battleground congressional districts showed those districts disapproved of Trump’s handling of immigration 58 percent to 41 percent. Independents nationwide overwhelmingly disapproved of Trump on immigration, 63 percent to 37 percent.

Polling has regularly shown Americans strongly oppose Trump’s border wall, overwhelmingly support the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy he voided, and favor the kind of comprehensive immigration reform and path to citizenship he has eschewed. Even Trump’s latest base play — revoking birthright citizenship for the children of undocumented immigrants — had only 37 percent support when Pew last polled it back in 2015. Support for that proposal among independents had been dropping for a decade, from 44 percent in 2006.

AD

All of this comes with a caveat: Immigration as an issue often isn’t so much about how people feel as it is about how strongly they feel. Immigration hard-liners are among the most passionate and mobilized people in politics (which is how they’ve killed off multiple popular comprehensive bills). For this to really hurt the GOP in the election — even if just in the House and not the Senate — those independent voters have to not only disapprove of Trump’s immigration policy but actually vote against Republicans because of it. That’s a very different question.

AD

But Trump also is testing the bounds of how extreme one can be on immigration in a way we haven’t seen from past presidents or even Congress. And while immigration might have helped him in 2016, it’s also fair to note that his opponent was the other most unpopular presidential candidate in modern history, that Trump lost the popular vote and that he won by less than 80,000 votes in the three Rust Belt states that decided the election: Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. He very nearly lost, at which point we would almost undoubtedly eulogize his immigration strategy as a bust.

Oh, and also, the GOP suddenly isn’t doing so well in the Midwest and Rust Belt. Perhaps the caravan strategy and Trump’s upping of the ante will help remedy that. It’s also possible that we’ve oversold the success of his divide-and-conquer approach on issues such as immigration just because he eked out one win in some very special circumstances two years ago.