Posted on 01/07/2004 5:37:03 PM PST by PhiKapMom
Wednesday, January 07, 2004
Dean's Statement on Bush Administration Immigration Proposal
BURLINGTON--Governor Howard Dean issued the following statement in response to President Bush's immigration proposal:
"I share the disappointment of millions of hardworking immigrants who had hoped the President would show true leadership in addressing the difficult issue of immigration reform.
"The President's proposal will help big corporations who currently employ undocumented workers.
"But it does nothing to place hardworking immigrants on a path to citizenship and would create a permanent underclass of service workers with second-class status.
"President Bush's decision to raise immigration at this juncture appears to be little more than a cynical gesture in an election year."
Governor Dean believes:
We need earned legalization for undocumented immigrants in the US who work hard, pay taxes, and otherwise obey the rules, so that they can become full participants in society, including becoming citizens. We also need a temporary worker program that responds to US labor demands but ensures US workers are not displaced, and that offers family unification, the right to organize, and a clear path to citizenship.
And we need strong, enforceable labor standards in our trade agreements and should target development assistance to areas of high migration. This will help create strong middle classes in other countries so that people will not need to migrate to the US in search of work.
Source: Dean Press Release on Immigration (Needs Your Comments)
For Immediate Release
Date: January 7, 2004
Clark On Immigration Reform: "Too Little, Too Late"
"During the last election, President Bush promised to work with President Vicente Fox and our allies to meaningfully reform our immigration system. That's one of many promises he hasn't kept. Once again, the White House is talking about immigration reform, but they're not doing enough about it. The Bush proposal is too little, too late. It shouldn't take an election to get President Bush to focus on immigration reform.
"Today, the Bush White House proposed an immigration reform program that fails to help the immigrants who contribute to their communities every day, that fails to fix backlogs in the current system, and that fails to focus law enforcement resources on improving border security. It is wrong to leave foreign workers trapped in a temporary worker program.
"Real reform must be based on the core principles of economic security, access to legalization, family reunification, and homeland security. We should allow hard-working, law-abiding, undocumented workers to eventually earn their citizenship.
"We need leadership in the White House that recognizes the important contributions that immigrants make to this country."
Wesley Clark Statement on Immigration Reforms
Kerry Statement On New Immigration Policies
January 07, 2004
For Immediate Release
"President Bush promised that America's relationship with Latin America would be a centerpiece of his foreign policy. Until now, he has ignored that promise, breaking faith with Hispanic Americans and Latin America. Bush has also failed to follow through on his promise to work with Vicente Fox, leaving that relationship in tatters.
"Bush's policy rewards business over immigrants by providing them with a permanent pool of disenfranchised temporary workers who could easily be exploited by employers. Bush's proposal fails to address the plight of immigrants coming to work in the United States by not providing a meaningful path to becoming legal permanent residents. And if Bush is really concerned about the plight of immigrants coming to work in the United States he should tell his party to stop the heartless and divisive politics the Republican Party is employing in California to get a new Prop 187 on the ballot for next year's election, and a similar effort in Arizona to victimize immigrants for the failures of government and an unstable economy.
"As president, I will support sensible reform of our immigration system that protects workers and also provides employers with the employees that they need. I will immediately resume our dialogue with President Fox and put in place an earned legalization program that will allow undocumented immigrants to legalize their status if they have been in the United States for a certain amount of time, have been working, and can pass a background check. This makes sense for the economy, provides fairness to people in our communities who have worked hard and paid taxes, and will also allow us to strengthen our homeland security by bringing undocumented workers out of the shadows and into the light of greater accountability."
-30-
Kerry's Comments on Immigration
Lieberman Statement On Bush Immigration Proposal
(January 7, 2004)
Lieberman released comprehensive proposal in September
ARLINGTON, VA -- Joe Lieberman, who released his own comprehensive immigration reform proposal last September, responded to the expected release of President Bush's immigration reform plan today:
"George Bush's plan leaves foreign workers as fodder for our fields and factories, without giving them a path to legalization and a fair shot at the American Dream. He's had an election year conversion to immigration reform, but it's too little and three years too late."
Lieberman cited four major differences between Bush's plan and his plan:
EARNED LEGALIZATION: Lieberman's plan provides a path for immigrants to earn legal status; Bush's does not. Lieberman would allow undocumented immigrants to apply for permanent residency if they have lived in the U.S. for at least five years, worked hard, obeyed the law, and pay taxes. In contrast, Bush's plan would essentially force immigrants back to their home countries after their work visa expires.
BACKLOGS: Bush's plan does little to address the huge backlogs that are keeping legal immigrants from their spouses and children. Lieberman would increase the number of visas, hire more consular officials to process applications, and give the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services a greater share of the old INS budget.
IMMIGRANTS RIGHTS: Bush's plan does little to protect immigrant workers from exploitation by unscrupulous employers. Lieberman would guarantee fair wages and safe workplace conditions. He would also ensure that undocumented immigrants in detention receive a bond hearing, and access to counsel.
AMERICAN DREAM FUND: Unlike Bush's plan, which does nothing to help immigrants who want to learn English, Lieberman would establish an American Dream Fund -- a public-private partnership to expand access to existing English as a Second Language classes and create new programs where the need is greatest.
For more details on Lieberman's plan, visit Immigration
Lieberman's comments on Immigration
Wednesday, January 7, 2004
Edwards Says Bush Immigration Proposal Is Wrong For Immigrants And Wrong For America
North Carolina Senator John Edwards (D-NC) today released the following statement in response to President Bush's new immigration proposal:
"President Bush's election-year plan violates our country's most fundamental principles: We are a nation of immigrants who are equals, not second-class guest workers, and we believe in equal rights and equal treatment for all. President Bush's plan would move millions of people into a second-class status with no real promise of citizenship. This is wrong for Latino immigrants, and it is wrong for all Americans who believe in America's promise of equal justice for all.
"The right kind of immigration reform will ensure that immigrants who work hard, pay their taxes, and play by the rules have the opportunity to become permanent members of the American community."
Edwards Statement on Immigration
January 7, 2004
Kucinich Questions Bush Immigration Plan
Democratic Presidential Candidate Dennis Kucinich released this statement today:
"The net result of President Bush's proposal could be disastrous. His approach will solidify second-class status for low-wage immigrant workers, because their rights will be dependent on the whims of their employers. You can imagine what will happen if workers try to organize.
"I support and will work to implement the cause of the Immigrant Workers Freedom Ride that crossed this country in September, including legalization and a road to citizenship for all immigrant workers in this country, the right of immigrant workers to re-unite their families, protecting the rights of immigrants in the workplace, and protecting the civil rights and civil liberties of all."
Kucinich Comments on Immigration
Gephardt Statement on Bush's New Immigration Policy January 7, 2004 -
Washington, DC - Dick Gephardt today released the following statement on President Bushs Immigration policy.
"After a long delay, President Bush has announced immigration reform principles that place a greater emphasis on political positioning than serious policy solutions. President Bush's proposal to grant temporary worker status to undocumented immigrants is, at best, a half measure that has the potential to do more harm than good.
"Over the past three years, President Bush has been silent on the need for comprehensive immigration reform that is fair to undocumented immigrants who play by the rules and pay their taxes while enhancing homeland security. I was the first to introduce legislation that accomplishes both goals. My Earned Legalization and Family Unification Act of 2001, drafted with members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, would bring undocumented immigrants out of the shadows and into the light of greater accountability by granting legal status to those who can prove that they have been in the United States for five years, have a work history of at least two years and can pass a criminal background check. My legislation would also speed the reunification of immigrant families to solidify family ties and build stronger communities.
"Our nation needs immigration reform because it is the right thing to do. We must recognize and reward the hard work of undocumented immigrants who have come to our country to embrace the American dream and contribute to our economic prosperity. At the same time, we need immigration reform to enhance our security. Reducing the number of undocumented immigrants in the United States will enable us to better focus on individuals who pose a real terrorist threat to our nation. In addition, streamlining the enforcement of our immigration laws will allow us to shift important enforcement resources to tracking down those who have come to the United States to do us real harm.
"I welcome President Bush back to the debate on immigration reform, but I challenge him to go beyond mere rhetoric and support a more comprehensive reform proposal such as my earned legalization proposal. I also challenge the president to press the Republican leadership in Congress to pass important bipartisan immigration proposals that are pending in Congress like the DREAM Act, which will provide assistance and access to a college education for qualified undocumented immigrant students who are among our best brightest."
Gephardt's comments on Immigration
|
|
|
FreeRepublic , LLC PO BOX 9771 FRESNO, CA 93794
|
It is in the breaking news sidebar! |
John Edwards wanted an amnesty. Bush didn't give him what he wanted and he's pouting...sounds familiar.
Just like Rush said today on his show.
Bush has pushed them slap of the map.
One big orgy.
I wish the purists would take some time to read what the other side of the coin is.
As for me, I do not think President Bush is doing any pandering. I think he is trying to stop an out of control situation, created, blessed, and condoned by the left in this country.
Respecting Immigrants' Vital Role In Rebuilding The American Community
America is an immigrant nation. As President, I will recognize and respect the vital role immigrants have played in building the American community.
Candidate Bush promised that he would be a different kind of Republican, supportive of immigrants and their desires to achieve the American Dream. Candidate Bush promised to revamp the naturalization process so that immigrants who met the requirements could obtain their citizenship in six months or less. In 2001, President Bush said he would work with President Fox of Mexico to develop a new immigration policy that recognized the economic contribution of immigrants, particularly those from Mexico, and that would respect the human rights of these migrants.
Unfortunately, President Bush has not kept these promises.
While he made these promises and invited mariachis to play at the White House, his Attorney General, John Ashcroft, was deputizing local police authorities as junior INS agents to track down undocumented immigrants. Instead of exercising leadership to achieve comprehensive immigration reform, President Bush has turned his back on Mexico and other Latin American countries. He has ignored the dreams of millions of immigrants to become a legitimate part of our society, and not simply its unseen workforce. Instead of revamping and streamlining the immigration agency and its processes, the President has allowed the agency to be swallowed up into the Department of Homeland Security, where immigrants are routinely treated as terrorists until proven otherwise.
We need a White House that will lead Congress to enact real immigration reform. As President, I will work tirelessly to achieve that goal.
I will work to ensure that people who work hard, pay taxes, and otherwise obey the rules can become full participants in our society, including becoming citizens.
I will work to regularize the inevitable future migration of labor in a way that makes economic and humanitarian sense. Deaths in the desert do neither.
I will propose reforms that ensure we can meet our economy?s need for workers at all skill levels, without pitting foreign workers against U.S. workers and while respecting workers' rights including the right to organize.
I will work to forge stronger partnerships with countries from which immigrants migrate -- especially Mexico -- so that in the long run, fewer people will be driven by desperation to break laws and risk their lives for basic opportunities that every human being deserves.
I will work to ensure that immigrants who are detained by the Department of Homeland Security are afforded their basic civil rights and that our concern for national security does not become another excuse for racial profiling.
I will build on our country?s long history of welcoming immigrants in ways that reflect our need for security but do not sacrifice the basic ideals upon which this nation was founded.
This seems to be a common theme with the Democratic contenders. But I'm just a bit confused:
OTOH, I believe PresBush`s new policy inititive on immigration will eventually lead to the same outcome. Granting legal status to illegal aliens is tantamount to granting a pardon. Amnesty means, granting a pardon.
The Reagan amnesty of 1986 was supposed to be a one shot deal and it was suppose to stop illegal immigration into the US. It actually did the opposite. It raised illegal immigration to higher and higher levels.
If we don't secure our borders, more and more aliens will keep entering the US illegally. The cycle will never end. Therefore, any idea of an amnesty is hopeless and an effort in futility.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.