Posted on 04/11/2005 5:25:04 PM PDT by fight_truth_decay
Several senators have threatened to attach amnesty and other immigration liberalizing amendments to the emergency war supplemental bill being considered by the Senate this week.-AgJOBS Amnesty and other Liberalizing Immigration Provisions
FAIR Legislative Update April 11, 2005, Debate on the bill begins TODAY.
No surprise here. What is sort of a surprise is how bad the state GOP and its two US Senators are on the issue.
What the author of this article fails to understand, or deceptively fails to reveal, is that states are prohibited by the US Constitution from making distinctions based on ones immigration status. Therefore, if someone is a resident of Texas, they are to be allowed to pay in state tuition.
More distortions by FAIR. Why do they fail to include the economic benefit these people provide? They should at least include the value of their labor and what they contribute to Texas GDP. FAIR will never forward its agenda using UNfair and deceptive tactics.
Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) is considering offering an amendment to lift the cap on H-2B seasonal "unskilled" guestworkers. These foreign workers are often hired to fill jobs also sought after by American teens, including hotel resort work and other summer vacation related employment. The cap is currently set at 66,000 visas per year.
Another potential amendment includes the DREAM Act which would provide certain illegal aliens with amnesty and reduced in-state college tuition benefits.
Senators John McCain (R-AZ) and Edward Kennedy (D-MA) may offer a guestworker/amnesty amendment that is far more sweeping than President Bush's guestworker/amnesty proposal.
http://capwiz.com/fair/issues/alert/?alertid=7384506&type=ta
"What the author of this article fails to understand, or deceptively fails to reveal, is that states are prohibited by the US Constitution from making distinctions based on ones immigration status. Therefore, if someone is a resident of Texas, they are to be allowed to pay in state tuition."
Mind pointing our the lyrics, line and verse, from the Constitution Song, for that claim of yours?
i got accepted to a university a month ago.
guess what? i got classified as out-of-state.
guess who gets in-state tuition? among residents, the children of illegals.
it's ironic that i grew up on a farm, hoeing beets and beans with migrants. their kids get in-state tuition, but i get out-of-state tuition. very few americans do field work.
another irony is that my natural mother's 3/4 indian. but i'm not affiliated with a tribe because i'm adopted and cannot prove myself. i look italian.
life in the united states of america.
Where in the US Constitution does it say anything that pertains to requiring Texas to provide education to illegal aliens (or to any child, for that matter) ?
The US Constitution is silent on education, which means it's up to the states.
The employers of the illegal aliens need to pay for the education of the children whose parents they have hired. Since the employer is the only one who benefits, they need to pay the cost for these children rather than sticking the taxpayer with it.
Don't mind CBG--he musta accidentally got a copy of the "Living Constitution." Those get misfiled in bookstores all the time.
"Policies could then be pursued to hold employers financially accountable. "
When illegal workers are found at a business the employer should be fined considerably, or seize business assets.
We don't need those kind of employers competing with legal, tax paying, fair wage paying employers. So if they are put out of business...... that is the consequence for hiring illegal immigrants!
We must take away the financial incentives that make hiring illegals so lucrative.
And stop the nonsense of issuing drivers licenses to illegals. Any government official that supports illegal immigrants is guilty of subversion and should be forcefully removed from office. There are no longer any reasonable excuses to support illegal immigrants.
I propose a possible solution to the problem of illegal immigration it's simple:
Make a law which requires all businesses to pay unskilled illegal immigrants the same paycheck as trained American citizens.
That way the businesses lose all incentive to hire them. The next step is to spread the word across the borders so that the immigrants will not make the mistake of becoming impoverished in US territories.
Of course the real challenge would be to convince business owners to support such a bill. But that's an ethical problem.
A 1996 federal law addressing illegal immigration included a provision affecting state residency requirements for in-state tuition rates, traditionally a matter of state law. Now, states are prohibited from offering in-state tuition rates to unauthorized immigrant students unless other U.S. citizens are eligible for the same rate. Since 2001, more than 20 states have introduced bills addressing in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants. Seven states have established new residency standards allowing unauthorized immigrant students to receive in-state tuition under certain conditions. Students without legal immigrant status continue to be ineligible for federal financial aid, although states are required to provide K-12 public education as a result of a 1982 Supreme Court decision.
Lawmakers watching Kansas tuition lawsuit
BY KEVIN O'HANLON / The Associated Press
With a legislative proposal pending to allow children of illegal immigrants to pay in-state tuition while attending Nebraska's public colleges, lawmakers are watching a federal lawsuit challenging a similar law in Kansas.
The lawsuit was filed last year in U.S. District Court in Topeka after the Kansas law was passed. It was filed on behalf of the Federation for American Immigration Reform and 24 university students who allege the tuition policy violates federal law, the U.S. Constitution and rewards illegal immigrants for being in the United States illegally. More Session 2005 stories
"It is the intent of Congress, as well as a compelling government interest, to remove the incentive for illegal immigration provided by the availability of public benefits," the lawsuit says. "It is a national policy that aliens within the nation's borders do not depend on public resources to meet their needs and that the availability of public benefits should not constitute an incentive for immigration to the United States."
The Nebraska measure (LB239) was introduced by Sen. Diane Schimek of Lincoln.
She said while there is a chance the Kansas lawsuit could adversely affect her bill, Schimek noted that eight states have passed such laws without objection from the federal government.
"I don't think the federal government thinks there's a problem with states doing this," she said. "I think you can make a very compelling argument that it's up to the states" and is not a federal issue.
Schimek's proposal has won the support of the University of Nebraska Board of Regents.
The bill would require illegal immigrants to be pursuing or promise to pursue legal status in order to take advantage of in-state tuition.
Supporters of the measure say the students who would be helped by the bill didn't choose to enter the country illegally and shouldn't be punished.
The Kansas lawsuit, which is scheduled for a hearing April 25, was filed last year by conservative Republican Kris Kobach, who lost his bid for a congressional seat in November.
Others also have criticized the Kansas law.
Kansas state Sen. Phil Journey, R-Haysville, has said the law is "an unfair burden on taxpayers to support illegal status."
Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline has distanced himself from the defense of the law. Kline said earlier that his office's civil litigation division will handle the state's defense in a federal lawsuit. He said its attorneys will report to Dave Davies, deputy attorney general for civil litigation, instead of Kline.
Kline said he is concerned efforts granting such in-state tuition will diminish the value of legal immigration. He also said a state-by-state approach to immigration issues is ill-advised.
Schimek's bill has not been designated a priority measure by any lawmaker, meaning it is unlikely to advance out of the Education Committee or be debated on the floor this session.
If it does not get killed by the committee, it would be eligible for debate next year.
Schimek said she will likely prioritize the measure next year.
"I want to prioritize this bill in the worst way," she said.
The employers of of illegal aliens should be prosecuted.
Article 1 section 8.
Sort of like the depressing the wages of unskilled labor in the area where they are prevalent. Illegals depress GDP all the way around. There is no benefit.
republicans will do nothing in the respect and dims want the
illegals to give benefits to so they can get votes.
look for nothing to be done in America's favor any time soon.
I don't think the matter of PROVIDING an education is at issue. It's whether a state can discriminate based on one's immigration status that is at issue. Clearly, a state may not. See article 1 section 8.
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