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For Ted Cruz, The Hard Part Comes Next
NPR ^ | 06/20/2015 | Jessica Taylor

Posted on 06/20/2015 7:55:29 AM PDT by GIdget2004

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To: Democrat_media

You should really stop watching and reading the Democrat Media.

Nobody could be more illegal immigration than I am. I am praying one of the candidates has the guts to support massive deportation.


81 posted on 06/20/2015 4:58:45 PM PDT by conservativejoy (We Can Elect Ted Cruz! Pray Hard, Work Hard, Trust God!)
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To: conservativejoy; All; Isara
I posted a link from Senator Jeff Sessions that says Obama will use “trade in Services” to flood the USA with 3rd world immigrants. if you people would take a minute to read what Sessions says then you'd see what obama is up tol Sessions also said here how Obama will go around any wording that supposedly stops this or even any ammendment. The folllowing is from Senator Jeff Sessions and here he explains how Obama will go around immigration law in several different ways:

http://www.conservativehq.com/node/20233

5. Immigration Increases. There are numerous ways TPA could facilitate immigration increases above current law—and precious few ways anyone in Congress could stop its happening. For instance: language could be included or added into the TPP, as well as any future trade deal submitted for fast-track consideration in the next 6 years, with the clear intent to facilitate or enable the movement of foreign workers and employees into the United States (including intracompany transfers), and there would be no capacity for lawmakers to strike the offending provision. The Administration could also simply act on its own to negotiate foreign worker increases with foreign trading partners without ever advertising those plans to Congress. In 2011, the United States entered into an agreement with South Korea—never brought before Congress—to increase the duration of L-1 visas (a visa that affords no protections for U.S. workers).

Every year, tens of thousands of foreign guest workers come to the U.S. as part of past trade deals. However, because there is little transparency, estimating an exact figure is difficult. The plain language of TPA provides avenues for the Administration and its trading partners to facilitate the expanded movement of foreign workers into the U.S.—including visitor visas that are used as worker visas. The TPA reads:

“The principal negotiating objective of the United States regarding trade in services is to expand competitive market opportunities for United States services and to obtain fairer and more open conditions of trade, including through utilization of global value chains, by reducing or eliminating barriers to international trade in services… Recognizing that expansion of trade in services generates benefits for all sectors of the economy and facilitates trade.”

This language, and other language in TPA, offers an obvious way for the Administration to expand the number and duration of foreign worker entries under the concept that the movement of foreign workers into U.S. jobs constitutes “trade in services.”

Stating that “TPP contains no change to immigration law” is a semantic rather than a factual argument. Language already present in both TPA and TPP provide the basis for admitting more foreign workers, and for longer periods of time, and language could later be added to TPP or any future trade deal to further increase such admissions.

The President has already subjected American workers to profound wage loss through executive-ordered foreign worker increases on top of existing record immigration levels. Yet, despite these extraordinary actions, the Administration will casually assert that is has merely modernized, clarified, improved, streamlined, and updated immigration rules. Thus, at any point during the 6-year life of TPA, the Administration could send Congress a trade deal—or issue an executive action subsequent to a trade deal as part of its implementation—that increased foreign worker entry into the U.S., all while claiming it has never changed immigration law.

The President has circumvented Congress on immigration with serial regularity. But the TPA would yield new power to the executive to alter admissions while subtracting congressional checks against those actions. This runs contrary to our Founders’ belief, as stated in the Constitution, that immigration should be in the hands of Congress. The Supreme Court has consistently held that the Constitution grants Congress plenary authority over immigration policy. For instance, the Court ruled in Galvan v. Press, 347 U.S. 522, 531 (1954), that “the formulation of policies [pertaining to the entry of immigrants and their right to remain here] is entrusted exclusively to Congress… [This principle] has become about as firmly imbedded in the legislative and judicial issues of our body politic as any aspect of our government.” Granting the President TPA could enable controversial changes or increases to a wide variety of visas—such as the H-1B, B-1, E-1, and L-1—including visas that confer foreign nationals with a pathway to a green card and thus citizenship.

Future trade deals could also have the possible effect of preventing Congress from reforming abuses in our guest worker programs, as countries could complain that limitations on foreign worker travel constituted a trade barrier requiring adjudication by an international body.

The TPP also includes an entire chapter on “Temporary Entry” that applies to all parties and that affects U.S. immigration law. Additionally, the Temporary Entry chapter creates a separate negotiating group, explicitly contemplating that the parties to the TPP will revisit temporary entry at some point in the future for the specific purpose of making changes to this chapter—after Congress would have already approved the TPP. This possibility grows more acute given that TPP is a “living agreement” that can be altered without Congress.

Proponents of TPA should be required to answer this question: if you are confident that TPA would not enable any immigration actions between now and its 2021 expiration, why not include ironclad enforcement language to reverse any such presidential action?

82 posted on 06/20/2015 5:06:15 PM PDT by Democrat_media (Obama illegally got his FCC gestapo to impose SOROS' regulations on Internet)
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To: Democrat_media

I disagree with Jeff Sessions, as does Senator Cruz

Cruz proposed just such an Amendment reinforcing our immigration laws.


83 posted on 06/20/2015 5:09:35 PM PDT by conservativejoy (We Can Elect Ted Cruz! Pray Hard, Work Hard, Trust God!)
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To: Democrat_media

BTW< Jeff Sessions didn’t vote for the last TPA in 2002, for the same reasons. All the crap he said was going to happen then didn’t happen, and it is not going to happen now. There were at least s dozen trade deals done under the last TPA.

Folks scream about NAFTA. The reason we are still bleeding jobs overseas is because of regulations, unions, and high corporate taxes, The Dems have done an excellent job of diverting blame to keep us from addressing the real problems.


84 posted on 06/20/2015 5:17:11 PM PDT by conservativejoy (We Can Elect Ted Cruz! Pray Hard, Work Hard, Trust God!)
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To: conservativejoy

That amendment never made it to the senate floor.


85 posted on 06/20/2015 5:21:42 PM PDT by Tareli (President Sarah Palin, you betcha!)
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To: conservativejoy

Both of these senators seem to be good men, but only one of them voted to reduce the votes needed to 51. I want to know why. It’s a fair question.


86 posted on 06/20/2015 5:26:25 PM PDT by magglepuss (Don't tread on)
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To: magglepuss

Cruz was representing the 3 million jobs in the state of Texas that rely on imports. I think he really wants to have TPA for the next President. The next Congress may have a Dem controlled Senate, which will never pass TPA.

There has not been a trade deal passed without TPA in 80 years. We are being shut out of the world market and soon will not be able to compete.


87 posted on 06/20/2015 5:30:45 PM PDT by conservativejoy (We Can Elect Ted Cruz! Pray Hard, Work Hard, Trust God!)
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To: Tareli

Looks like the Senate is going to get another shot at it. I’ve already notified both my Senators not to vote for TPA without the Cruz language.


88 posted on 06/20/2015 5:32:24 PM PDT by conservativejoy (We Can Elect Ted Cruz! Pray Hard, Work Hard, Trust God!)
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To: conservativejoy

There has not been a trade deal passed without TPA in 80 years. We are being shut out of the world market and soon will not be able to compete.

We have also never had a person as president before that is out to destroy this country. I think that is a little more important than the history of TPA.


89 posted on 06/20/2015 5:39:59 PM PDT by magglepuss (Don't tread on)
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To: magglepuss

That is why TPP will not pass. No Body trust Obama nad everyone knows beside his agenda, he is the world’s lousiest negotiator. We have 44 Dems who will vote against. I can think of 4 Repubs who will vote against out of the chute and a slew of others who will vote against because of wanting to be re elected.


90 posted on 06/20/2015 5:45:00 PM PDT by conservativejoy (We Can Elect Ted Cruz! Pray Hard, Work Hard, Trust God!)
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To: conservativejoy

That is why TPP will not pass. No Body trust Obama

This is what is so scary to me. The R’s keep voting with Obama, while telling voters they don’t trust him. The words don’t match the rhetoric. I am tired of being lied to by the gope, and I did not believe Cruz was one of them.

The thing is, someone in this whole equation is wrong, Either Cruz or Sessions. Since I don’t trust Obama, and distrust those that do, I tend to believe Sessions until proven different.

Where is the proof that a bad tpp bill would not get 51 votes? I don’t think that Cruz can promise this, so why then vote to change anything to give Obama a possible edge?


91 posted on 06/20/2015 6:31:01 PM PDT by magglepuss (Don't tread on)
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To: GIdget2004

Well, I don’t think this assessment by NPR is worth anything. NPR doesn’t have a clue.


92 posted on 06/20/2015 6:39:21 PM PDT by CyberAnt ("The fields are white unto Harvest")
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To: Democrat_media; Isara

Attorney General Ed Meese, of the Reagan administration, is a liar and a spin-miester? Seriously?! Is there any crazy thing you folks won’t say to degrade Ted Cruz?


93 posted on 06/20/2015 9:12:02 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You can help: https://donate.tedcruz.org/c/FBTX0095/)
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To: MN_Mike

mnmikey, I read much and comment seldom.

Magglepuss appears to have an issue with a policy position of Mr. Cruz as opposed to disappointment of individuals support or nonsupport of Mr. Cruz.

I very much like Mr. Cruz, as it seems Magglepuss does, but to impugn him/her as a one issue voter denotes, to a degree, your own blind faith.

I do not grieve for my country, I actively pursue the means to affect the true greatness of this political experiment. Grieve not for your country, but for the blinders which you have placed upon your own senses and sensibilities


94 posted on 06/21/2015 12:09:28 AM PDT by Beer30
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To: Beer30

thank you, and very well said.


95 posted on 06/21/2015 5:09:05 AM PDT by magglepuss (Don't tread on)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“We’re in active discussion on TPA,” said McConnell, adding, “It’s an enormous grant of power, obviously, from a Republican Congress to a Democratic president, but that’s how much we believe in trade as an important part of America’s economy.”

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/07/mcconnell-fast-track_n_6432118.html

We all know that Obamacare is not about health care, and I am very concerned that this is not about trade. It doesn’t matter how good the bill is, we know that Obama will change the law, and get away with it, just like he did Obamacare.

What would our congress do if Obama tries to pull a fast one on them, impeach him?


96 posted on 06/21/2015 6:01:56 AM PDT by magglepuss (Don't tread on)
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