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G. Stolyarov II,
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The Rational Argumentator
To: G. Stolyarov II
2 posted on
06/09/2007 12:00:20 PM PDT by
VOA
To: G. Stolyarov II
Are you also going to wite about Sam Brokeback’s support of criminals, murderers, and gang members (known in the MSM and in Brokeback’s Senate office as “immigrants”)?
It’ll be interesting to see you make a rational argument there.
4 posted on
06/09/2007 12:07:45 PM PDT by
indcons
(Linda and Hugo Chavez - same goals, different methods)
To: G. Stolyarov II
Roll Call votes on the Immigration Bill.
On 24 May he voted Nay to Vitter Amdt (Eliminates the bill's amnesty provisions.)
On 5 June he missed all votes on amendments and all other business.
On 6 June he voted Nay to the Sessions Amdt (save American taxpayers up to $24 billion in the 10 years after passage of this Act, by preventing the earned income tax credit, which is, according to the Congressional Research Service, the largest anti-poverty entitlement program of the Federal Government, from being claimed by Y temporary workers or illegal aliens given status by this Act until they adjust to legal permanent resident status.); Ensign Amdt (improve the criteria and weights of the merit-based evaluation system.); Vitter Amdt (require that the U.S. VISIT system- the biometric border check-in/check-out system first required by Congress in 1996 that is already well past its already postponed 2005 implementation due date- be finished as part of the enforcement trigger.); Dorgan Amdt (sunset the Y-1 nonimmigrant visa program after a 5-year period.); Coburn Amdt (require the enforcement of existing border security and immigration laws and Congressional approval before amnesty can be granted.)
On 6 June he voted Yea on the DeMint Amdt (require health care coverage for holders of Z nonimmigrant visas.); Cornyn Amdt (address documentation of employment and to make an amendment with respect to mandatory disclosure of information.); Inhofe Amdt (amend title 4, United States Code, to declare English as the national language of the Government of the United States, and for other purposes.); Cornyn Amdt (permanent bar for gang members, terrorists, and other criminals.)
7 June Cloture Vote #1 - Yea.
7 June Cloture Vote #2 - Not Voting.
7 June Cloture Vote #3 - Not Voting.
Running for President and espousing a conservative stance and not following through. He voted to give the EITC to 'probationary (amnesty) immigrants'. Then voted against eliminating amnesty from this bill. He also voted against enforcing existing law.
For me that does not bode well on his chances of getting my vote. No article can help he reclaim a conservative stance.
5 posted on
06/09/2007 12:25:38 PM PDT by
K-oneTexas
(I'm not a judge and there ain't enough of me to be a jury. (Zell Miller, A National Party No More))
To: G. Stolyarov II
His strong support for illegals is definatly hurting, outside of that, most of his problems are personable.
I actually do like him alot, but his support of illegals is a make or break issue.
6 posted on
06/09/2007 12:48:53 PM PDT by
Sonny M
("oderint dum metuant")
To: G. Stolyarov II
Tom Tancredo: Sam Brownback ‘Miserable’ on Illegal Immigration
Illegal immigration crusader Rep. Tom Tancredo is blasting 2008 presidential hopeful Sen. Sam Brownback for having what he charged was a “miserable record” on illegal immigration.
In quotes picked up by Knight Ridder on Tuesday, the chairman of the House Immigration Reform Caucus ripped the Kansas Republican as “an extreme opponent of getting tough on illegal immigration.”
Adding fuel to the fire, a Tancredo spokesman later blasted Brownback as someone who is “as left as they come on this issue.”
Tancredo is ire was raised by Brownback’s support for the Kennedy-McCain immigration reform bill, which would grant illegals defacto amnesty and allow them to earn citizenship in a few short years.
The illegal immigration issue roils the Republican base like no other. Just a few weeks ago, pundits said President Bush’s support for a guest worker program was behind the GOP’s open revolt over the Dubai ports fiasco.
Responding to Tancredo, Sen. Brownback denied charges that he was soft on illegal immigration.
“The Senate Judiciary Committee has been hard at work for over a month on comprehensive immigration reform,” Brownback explained in a prepared response. “No bill before the committee proposes blanket amnesty . . . Border security is our main priority.
The Kansas Republican insisted that he and his colleagues are “working to merge the best of several proposals, and hopefully we can all agree that we must protect our borders, enforce the law, provide legal means for people to work in the United States, and fix a broken system
7 posted on
06/09/2007 2:06:09 PM PDT by
Sybeck1
(Bet you Bush wishes he had that "Fairness Doctrine" now, to calm the debate!)
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