Sunday, June 1, 2008

Why don't Asian Americans vote for the Republicans

It has always been a surprise to me as to why Asian Americans don'tvote en masse for the Republicans. Like several Indians of my age group and background, the people that I go out with are either graduate students at some of the best universities in the U.S. or engineers and scientists at some of the largest companies in the world such as IBM,Intel or Google and a significant fraction of them appear to share leftist sympathies. However some thought on this particular question yielded possible hypotheses:


1) The Asian Americans in question, tend to come from countries withsocialistic tendencies and in the absence of reflection and introspection on the topic of which "system" works best, the simple laws of inertia dictate that they continue down the path that was advocated to them by the political leaders of the countries where they spent their formative years. Think about India, the country I come from. For the longest time, it was bad to be an entrepreneur and great to be a bureaucrat. (My father served with the Government for over 35 years with great dedication and I can personally attest that there is something such as a honest and comptetent bureaucrat.) For people who have been raised in such a setting, they are likely to vote for the Democrat party which thinks highly of the bureaucrat and in many ways, despises the entrepreneur (if not inwords, then certainly in action)Besides there is the usual problem we conservatives face, which is to convince the masses that the invisible hands of the government work infinitely better than the visible hands of the government. This is not an entirely satisfactory explanation because this problem, if I may so say, is true for whites and for Asian Americans, yet the latter group votes for Republican candidates less frequently than whites ofsimilar socio-economic characteristics.


2) The Republican Party has also done little to reach out to Asian Americans as compared to theDemocrats. There is nothing that stops the party from doing it. And frankly there is no reason for us to be defensive about this or to not reach out actively. One of the most senior Republicans, Mitch McConnell is married to an AsianAmerican, Elaine Chao so we have examples of where Republican leadershave family ties with Asian Americans.


3) Republicans like Tom Tancredo and (maybe) Duncan Hunter who are occasionally seen as racist whackos are a big liability on this front.Frequently the extension is made (and even I would confess, not altogether unreasonably) that these folks who rail against illegal immigrants are too politically correct to say that we are against all immigration and while they couch their opposition to illegal immigration, they are in their hearts, racists who just do not like'persons of color' including the pale-skinned Vietnamese and the brown-skinned Indians. There is little that the Republican Party does as an institution to dispel that notion and again the Democrats are only too happy to step in. After all the brown-skinned Indian might think that if the Democrat party is for the blacks, they might also be speaking for my interests, little realizing that the concerns of theblacks and Asian Americans are diametrically opposite and what ends up benefiting the blacks almost always ends up hurting Asian Americans.Higher taxes and affirmative action in college admissions are only two of those issues that readily come to mind.


4) Finally, a significant fraction of the Asian American population inthe U.S. such as the Pakistanis, the Indonesians come from Muslim countries and rightly or wrongly, the US is often portrayed it as being at war with Islam. While this is not true, and it needs to be pointed out that the battle lines are between the US, its allies andordinary law-abiding Muslims on one hand. and terrorists who happen to be followers of Islam, on the other, again there needs to be outreach to get that message across. Indeed the Republican Party does too little to contradict that charge that it is against Islam and in fact, some of its words and actions could be seen as espousing the opposite view.


The above are the reasons I submit why the Asian Americans don't vote in large measures for the Republican Party with about 2/3rds of them voting (when they do in fact vote) for the Democrats. Obviously as a Republican I would like to see that change and hope and wish that the Republican Party machinery gear up for a protracted effort of out reach. As an Asian American myself I would like to strenuously point out that this is not an argument for government handouts in any way, shape or form. I do not call for this in the hope that Asian Americans will be awarded more government contracts from the DOD in the name of diversity and affirmative action and all the bull crap that goes on along with that. It is simply to argue that the interests of Asian Americans and the Republican Party converge, both at the level of the tactical day-to-day issues as well as at the level of the more permanent values which eventually underlie any strong relationship. By breaking away from our motherlands and moving to America, we have demonstrated with what we hold most precious, namely our lives, that we believe in individualism and self-reliance and not scraps of handouts from the government. It is precisely to these same emotions I appeal to when I urge my fellow Asian Americans to vote for the Republican Party in larger numbers than ever before and for the Republican Party to reach out to this group, like it has never done before.

Labels: , ,

2 Comments:

Blogger Jeff said...

Since we talked about this briefly, I have been thinking about it. I have had several political discussions with a recent immigrant from China. She is much smarter than me. However, in them, it is apparent that her capacity for political thought and reason is not what it should be given her level of intelligence.

This makes sense. If you come from China, they don't exactly encourage free political thought, they don't have things like debate classes in high school, you are not barraged from every side with different political viewpoints and forced to chose between them. If someone has recently arrived from a country like China, it would make sense that ones practice with political thought is low, and thus that person may be an easy recruit for a party that often caters to individuals who prefer simpler political concepts (despite being flawed).

All that said, my sample size is 1, so, this may limit inferences to the general Chinese population.

November 7, 2008 at 6:35 PM  
Blogger sutirthabagchi said...

You could be right there regarding the appeal of a simplistic political ideology. Yet it also reveals an opportunity for the GOP to reach out to people like her because she is likely to be a natural convert to the cause of economic and political freedom because it was presumably, the lack thereof in her home country which caused her to immigrate. My understanding suggests that the vast majority of immigrants to the U.S. are flocking to the shores of the U.S. precisely because they come from countries with statist, socialist systems which stifle one's progress and by moving to the U.S. they are voting with their feet. Unfortunately the GOP makes little effort to capitalize on these natural inherent tendencies in immigrants and almost pushes them to the other camp by its unreasonably negative attitude towards immigrants. And then the Democratic Party is only too happy to help out by promising the gullible masses how they would be better off by choosing them over the Republicans.

November 9, 2008 at 9:14 AM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home