Not sure what to think of the Asian turnaround in election results  but
there is a good chance, it seems to me, that the GOP will once again
snatch defeat from the jaws of victory. While this isn't some previous  era
it still is a pronounced tendency among a significant number of  
Evangelicals
to condemn to Hell anyone who isn't, like them, Evangelical  -with a  sort
of caveat for Jews and Catholics. 
 
"Asian vote" clearly means many Christians, to be sure, but it also means  
Hindus 
and Buddhists and Taoists and Confucians, and others, and Evangelical  
feelings 
for such people can be negative and unwelcoming. Can this change in some  
kind
of productive way? 
 
In theory, yes. Many years ago  -think back to the 1950s-  E.  Stanley 
Jones, 
a true-believer Evangelical, preached objectivity about Asian faiths, and 
counseled that it is a virtue to try and find whatever is good in these  
faiths 
as one means to communicate with Chinese and Japanese and Thais and 
India-Indians and others. Not for one minute did he say that the Gospel 
should be "demoted" in status, just that  we need to see good wherever 
it may be found and give it due credit.
 
Can most of today's Evangelicals go that far? Clearly some can.
The point is that about 80% of Evangelicals vote Republican
and if most do not have something like E .Stanley Jones' outlook
they could well alienate Asian voters  -now in excess of 5% of the  vote
and projected to reach the 7% or 8% level in the 2020s.
 
Billy
 
 
===================
 
The Hill
 
Why did Asian vote dip for Dems?
By Mike Lillis and Justin Sink - 11/18/14 
 

 
Hispanics were not the only ethnic group shedding support for the Democrats 
 in this year’s midterm elections.  
Democratic backing among Asian-Americans declined sharply in the 2014 
cycle,  according to exit polls, suggesting President Obama’s decision to delay 
 
executive action on immigration policy might have wounded his party in the 
eyes  of a voting bloc that has sided strongly with Democrats for the better 
part of a  generation.
 
While some of the shift almost certainly reflects the historically low  
Asian-American turnout in midterm cycles, there’s also a sense among advocates  
that the delay might have been a contributing factor.  
Margaret Fung, the executive director of the Asian American Legal Defense 
and  Education Fund, said it was hard to say whether there was “unhappiness” 
with the  president’s delay among the Asian-American community because of 
the historically  low midterm turnout, as well as general support for 
Democratic immigration  policies. 
 
But she was quick to note that those voters wanted to “hold accountable” 
the  president “after promises that have been made that something will happen,
”  adding that there was underlying “concern” Obama might not move as 
aggressively  as some are hoping. 
“I hope he goes as big as he needs to go, and that it is actually as  
expansive as it should be — because the fact is, this is only temporary,” Fung  
said. 
The immigration issue hasn’t been overlooked by Asian lawmakers on Capitol  
Hill, where the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus (CAPAC) has 
been  urging Obama to take executive action for most of the year. 
CAPAC’s chief concerns revolve around family and employer-based visas. The  
State Department estimated last year that roughly 40 percent of those in 
line  for family visas are from Asia, particularly Southeast Asian countries 
like  China, the Philippines, South Korea and Vietnam, while more than 80 
percent of  those backlogged under the employer-based system are Asian.
 
“Our communities need executive action that ends long separations of 
families  currently stuck in visa backlogs, protects the parents of “Dreamers,” 
and  expands work authorization to broad sectors of aspiring Americans,” 
Chairwoman  Judy Chu (D-Calif.) said Friday. “These are bold and legal options 
the president  can take to quickly end the pain and fear of separation in 
immigrant  communities.”  
There is some cause for Democrats to be concerned. 
Although Asian-American voters switched their support back and forth 
between  Democrats and Republicans through most of the Clinton administration, 
they
’ve  sided squarely with the Democrats since 1998 — until this year. 
Asian-Americans backed Republicans 50 percent to 49 percent at the polls 
this  cycle, according to a compilation of national exit polls. That’s a sharp 
 contrast from 2012, when 73 percent favored Democrats, and from 2010 — the 
last  midterm cycle — when the Democrats’ advantage was 59 percent to 41 
percent. 
The figures have prompted Republicans to celebrate while putting Democrats 
on  the defensive. 
Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.), head of CAPAC’s immigration taskforce, 
suggested  Monday that the polls are flawed. 
 
“The Asian-American Community has always been strongly Democratic, and I  
don’t believe that has changed at all,” Honda said in an email. “The polls 
that  people are citing used very small samples during a midterm election 
that had a  historically low turnout.” 
Still, Honda stressed the importance of sweeping immigration reforms to the 
 Asian community, saying Obama “needs to take steps towards fixing the 
problem  now.”  
“I believe such an order would even further strengthen the ties between the 
 [Asian and Pacific American] community and our party,” he said.  
In 2013, the White House prepared a report highlighting specifically how  
immigration reform could benefit Asian families. In addition to addressing 
the  backlog issue and status of those in the United States illegally, the 
White  House noted that petitioners from India and China represented a 
staggering 72  percent of the H-1B visa program, which allows high-skilled 
foreign 
workers to  come to the U.S. 
During a town -hall meeting earlier this summer in California, Obama  
specifically floated the idea of expanding the H-1B visa program through  
executive action. Technology companies have suggested that the government only  
could count heads of households — and not their spouses and children — against 
 visa caps to effectively expand the program. 
“I will use all the executive authority that I legally have in order to 
make  fixes in some of the system,” Obama said. “And that includes potentially 
making  the H-1B system that is often used by tech companies and some of 
the other  elements of our legal immigration system more efficient, so we can 
encourage  more folks to stay here.”
 
The White House declined to comment Monday, ahead of the president’s  
announcement, of what his executive orders will entail. But officials have said 
 
Obama will be presented with final recommendations for executive action in 
the  coming days, with action coming before the end of the year. 
Erin Oshiro, the immigration and immigrant rights’ senior staff attorney  
at  
Asian-Americans Advancing Justice, stressed that the Asian-American 
community  had “a lot at stake in the immigration debate,” noting that it 
represents about  10 percent of the community living in the U.S. illegally. 
She suggested that limiting the deferred action program to only the family  
members of current citizens or people already participating would be  “
disappointing.” 
“We really hope that relief will be as broad as possible,” she  said.

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