From the Right
/Politics
In Defending Hegseth Against Democratic Attacks, Senate Republicans Are Long on Outrage -- but Short on Memory
SAN DIEGO -- There has been a lot of talk lately about the need to return respect and civility to politics.
Although I'm not sure I buy into the premise that those things were ever really part of politics, I welcome the sentiment nonetheless.
We should start with Senate confirmation hearings, if it's not already too late. There is too much ...Read more
Mexican Firefighters 'Invade' California. We're Blessed To Have Them.
SAN DIEGO -- Hyperbolic conservatives have long claimed that Mexico is staging an "invasion" of the United States.
For more than three decades, I've mocked these fools for their ignorance. But now I stand corrected. It's really happening. The Mexicans are actually invading, and they're starting by reclaiming the stolen parcel of land known as...Read more
MAGA's Family Feud Over H-1B Visas Is Full of Inconsistencies
SAN DIEGO -- The media was too quick to move on from a recent MAGA civil war over H-1B visas, which allow companies to hire highly skilled foreign workers to fill specialty occupations.
We're not done yet. This is just the beginning of an argument that is likely to last all through President-elect Donald Trump's final term in office.
As will...Read more
A Postcard From Mexico, With Love -- and Fascination
GUADALAJARA, Mexico -- I try not to criticize my country, or my countrymen, while standing on foreign soil. But I'll make an exception.
A lot of Americans have an annoying habit of feeling really passionate about subjects they don't really understand. What we lack in knowledge and wisdom, we make up for in ego and self-confidence.
In that ...Read more
Biden's Clemency for Federal Prisoners Is Only Part of the Story
SAN DIEGO -- There are three things you need to know about the media and how they approach anything that is complicated.
First, as storytellers, we're drawn to the complicated.
Second, as journalists, we're paid to simplify the complicated.
Third, as mostly linear thinkers, we often struggle to break down and explain whatever is complicated...Read more
Instead of Threatening War, Americans Should Say 'Gracias' to Mexico for Being a Good Neighbor
SAN DIEGO -- As a Mexican American, my loyalties get questioned. Some folks offer a hypothetical. If war breaks out between Mexico and the United States, they ask, which side would I be on?
That's a no-brainer. My family and I owe everything to the country that took in my grandfather as a legal immigrant 100 years ago. And we owe nothing to ...Read more
You Can't Mess With Birthright Citizenship. The Law Isn't on Your Side.
SAN DIEGO -- If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
For the purpose of this discussion -- which will be guided not by nativist outrage but by common sense --"it" shall be defined as the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. Adopted in 1868, the amendment has been in good working order ever since.
In Section 1, it declares: "All persons born or ...Read more
Tariffs Are a Declaration of War Against U.S. Consumers Who Don't 'Buy American'
SAN DIEGO -- The liberal media will spend the next four years criticizing everything that President-elect Donald Trump says and does.
That's not fair. But, very often, the criticism will be justified.
Trump and his underachieving cabinet of misfit toys are not about to let the fact that they don't understand certain topics -- national ...Read more
Mass Deportations Could Save America, but Not in the Way You Think
SAN DIEGO -- Even as a Mexican American who supports immigrants and opposes President-elect Donald Trump, I'm eager to see the incoming administration deliver on mass deportations.
During a recent appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press," Trump was asked by host Kristen Welker if he planned, over the next four years, to deport everyone who is in ...Read more
The Two Parties Are Now Officially One. And That's Not Good News.
SAN DIEGO -- More evidence has just rolled in proving once again that the American people and the two major political parties that claim to represent them really do live on completely different planets.
At a time of deep political acrimony, when American voters have divided themselves into teams -- one blue, one red -- it is increasingly ...Read more
Biden Should Pardon Millions of Undocumented Immigrants -- Before Trump Gets His Hands on Them
SAN DIEGO -- What a strange time.
Americans are embroiled in a heated national conversation about whether the phrase "rule of law" actually means anything as long as there are presidential pardons. And the major political parties -- both of which have corrupted the pardon process for their benefit -- are pretending their hands are clean and ...Read more
Trump's Planned Tariffs Show Once Again That He's No Republican
SAN DIEGO -- Since he entered politics, President-elect Donald Trump has been called lots of names. But there is one label that doesn't quite fit, and it never has. Looking at his Cabinet picks and his plans for a second term, you can't very well call him a Republican.
To compare his Cabinet selections to a clown show would be an insult to ...Read more
How Rubio Ruined Ethnic Pride for Me
SAN DIEGO -- I knew this moment would come. But somehow, I thought it would feel bigger. And happier.
As it is, I just feel sad. I'm like a disillusioned Michael Corleone tightly hugging his brother Fredo in "The Godfather."
Only, for me, it's an ambitious but rudderless 53-year-old Cuban American senator from Florida who has disappointed me...Read more
Mass Deportations Would Be An Ugly Chapter for a Nation That Should Have Turned the Page
SAN DIEGO -- It seems just about every American has an opinion about mass deportations. It's too bad most of those views are so uninformed.
I've been writing about immigration for 35 years, and I still haven't figured it out.
My take is complicated by the branches on my family tree.
I don't have a single undocumented immigrant in my lineage...Read more
Identity Politics. Nobody Likes It, But Everybody Does It.
SAN DIEGO -- Had she won, Vice President Kamala Harris would have broken two barriers at once -- becoming the first woman and the first Indian American to be elected president.
And so, naturally, when the Democrat was defeated, Republicans were quick to deliver last rites to what they call "identity politics."
Not so fast. This election was ...Read more
Latinos Don't Need Lectures From the Left, Just Better Choices
SAN DIEGO -- Latinos are the pinata of the 2024 presidential election. So what else is new?
I didn't know who was going to win the 2024 presidential election, which seemed too close to call. But I knew two things for sure: Win or lose, Donald Trump was going get at least 40% of the Latino vote. And Latinos were going to get pummeled, ...Read more
Latinos Teach Democrats a Brutal Lesson at the Ballot Box
SAN DIEGO -- Oye, Democratic Party, Latinos sent you a message. Did you get it?
Former, and now also future, President Donald Trump has now set the high-water mark when it comes to Latino support for a Republican presidential candidate.
First, some context. The magic number is "40" -- as in 40%. That's the sacred threshold into the Hall of ...Read more
At Newspapers, Non-Endorsements Should Be a Non-Issue
SAN DIEGO -- You know how they say that teachers make the worst students?
A similar contradiction is at work with newspaper editorial boards.
I'm quite familiar with the species. Over the course of a decade, I worked as an editorial writer and columnist for newspapers in two states -- one blue, one red. In all, I wrote more than 1500 ...Read more
No Joke: Racist Comedian Took Cues From Trump
SAN DIEGO -- Gracias, court jester. You may have done the country a huge favor by helping defeat former President Donald Trump.
Who could have known that the October surprise of the 2024 election would be a racist joke about Puerto Rico told by a comic that I would guess few Americans have ever heard of?
As you already know if you saw a clip...Read more
The Latino Vote? In 2024, It's Complicated.
SAN DIEGO -- As a journalist, I've been telling the story of the Latino vote for 30 years. As a citizen, I'm part of that story.
I'm Exhibit A: I'm Latino, and I've been a voter for nearly 40 years. I'm a cafeteria voter who refuses to vote a "straight ticket," often voting for Democrats and Republicans on the same ballot. I vote the person, ...Read more