Los Angeles Times

The fight to win Asian American voters

This group is a recent Democratic stalwart but has a long history of activism from the right.

- By James Zarsadiaz James Zarsadiaz is an associate professor of history at the University of San Francisco and the author of “Resisting Change in Suburbia.” He is working on a book about Asian American conservati­sm since the Cold War.

There are more than 700 Asian American elected officials across the country, including the presumed Democratic Party presidenti­al nominee Kamala Harris and 20 members of Congress. Since the data show a leftward bent among Asian Americans Gen X and younger, one might expect that representa­tion to be entirely Democratic. But Asian Americans have long had an energetic presence in the Republican Party. It’s worth asking how attractive the GOP might look to them come November.

George H.W. Bush won this voting bloc 32 years ago. So did Bob Dole in 1996. In recent years, Elaine Chao, Nikki Haley, Vivek Ramaswamy and now Usha Vance have become household names. Although Haley and Ramaswamy failed to win the GOP presidenti­al nomination, they snagged speaking slots at the 2024 Republican National Convention to show their commitment to conservati­sm (however defined these days). They, along with California U.S. Reps. Vince Fong, Young Kim and Michelle Steel and Asian American politician­s elsewhere, underscore the growing visibility of this demographi­c within elite GOP circles.

The long history of Asian American activism from the right started with Hiram Fong, who was born to Chinese immigrants in Hawaii. He became a U.S. senator from the newly admitted state in 1959 and during his 18-year tenure built a reputation as a moderate. Fong secured funds to improve the islands’ infrastruc­ture, helped remove immigratio­n barriers and backed sweeping civil rights legislatio­n. He was also an ardent supporter of the Vietnam War and President Nixon, even after the fallout from Watergate.

The year Fong left office, S.I. Hayakawa, a Canadian-born Japanese American, began his term as U.S. senator from California as a somewhat inscrutabl­e Republican. A self-proclaimed supporter of racial minorities, he nonetheles­s opposed the establishm­ent of ethnic studies in 1969 as president of San Francisco State College (now University), a position he was appointed to by thenGov. Ronald Reagan. Hayakawa did not hide his Japanese heritage, yet he also promoted assimilati­on and wanted to make English the official U.S. language. In the late 1960s and 1970s Hayakawa’s brand of identity politics was palatable for an increasing­ly conservati­ve Republican Party.

There were also Asian American bureaucrat­s, diplomats and lobbyists influencin­g the right from behind the curtain. These efforts included Anna Chan Chennault, a journalist-turnedsoci­alite whose political and military ties through her husband, U.S. Maj. Gen. Claire Chennault, provided access to Republican­s such as Richard Nixon. In 1968, amid the race for the White House, Anna Chennault served as an intermedia­ry between Nixon and South Vietnam. Though the lore remains disputed, experts have claimed she helped stall peace negotiatio­ns between embattled Democratic incumbent President Lyndon B. Johnson and South Vietnamese leaders, as she and fellow Nixon supporters feared a deal would help Democrat Hubert Humphrey clinch the election. Nixon won. Well after the “Chennault affair,” she remained a reliable GOP ally.

In the 1980s and 1990s, the Republican Party made inroads with Asian American voters thanks to the efforts of former Nixon, Reagan and Bush administra­tion officials invested in improving U.S.-Asia relations, particular­ly with China. Moreover, outreach to specific demographi­c groups as promoted by Republican National Committee Chairman Lee Atwater — who, paradoxica­lly, also encouraged the use of dog whistles in campaignin­g — brought Asian Americans into the tent.

But by the mid-2000s, despite the prominence of figures including Matt Fong, Bobby Jindal, Jay Kim and Pat Saiki, Asian Americans’ support of the GOP and their overall presence within the larger party apparatus declined. Targeted appeals from Democratic Party operatives put Asian Americans solidly in the blue column. Democrats’ positions on education and healthcare, and the party’s overall image as more racially and religiousl­y inclusive, attracted recent immigrants and younger voters.

Then there was another turn. In 2013, following Mitt Romney’s failed presidenti­al bid and tepid election results for the party, the Republican National Committee came out with the Growth and Opportunit­y Project (a.k.a. the “RNC autopsy”) that suggested a renewed focus on people of color. The RNC hired dedicated staff to assist with Asian American outreach for the next election cycles — albeit inconsiste­ntly — to boost turnout in swing districts and states where these votes were crucial. This includes Georgia, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvan­ia, Texas and Virginia, among others. State and local parties have also tried direct outreach and placing Asian American Republican­s in leadership roles. Some of these efforts seem to have worked. Since 2020, despite the Trump administra­tion’s rhetoric labeling COVID-19 the “China virus” and a subsequent uptick of antiAsian violence, there’s an emerging conservati­ve element within Asian America.

Not all are registered Republican­s, and these conservati­ve activists are more common in areas with larger Asian American and Pacific Islander population­s. Many have gotten involved in local politics, such as ousting progressiv­e district attorneys and school board members. The Democratic Party’s priorities have scanned to some Asian Americans, particular­ly immigrants and refugees, as reminiscen­t of socialism or communism, ideologies often associated with violent regimes and restricted freedoms in the homeland. Furthermor­e, some Asian Americans argue that diversity, equity and inclusion initiative­s overlook Asian Americans or teach anti-Americanne­ss; some oppose affirmativ­e action or think authoritie­s have not done enough to counter antiAsian violence, pushing them rightward.

Indeed, in the 2020 and 2022 elections, Democrats won Asian Americans’ votes in national elections by noticeably smaller margins than in years past. November will give us some sense of whether this trend will keep moving in the GOP’s favor — or swing back toward stalwart Democratic support.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? KAMALA HARRIS speaks at a summit in 2021.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times KAMALA HARRIS speaks at a summit in 2021.

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