Posted on 09/30/2005 1:25:50 AM PDT by Uncle Joe Cannon
Posted on Fri, Sep. 30, 2005
THE AMERICAS
Jeb Bush calls for more foreign students
Speakers at The Herald's Americas Conference called for immigration reform and asserted that China's regional interest is business, not politics.
BY CHRISTINA HOAG AND PABLO BACHELET
pbachelet@herald.com
A forceful call by Gov. Jeb Bush to reform U.S. immigration laws and China's long shadow over Latin America were the buzz of the first day of the Americas Conference in Coral Gables on Thursday.
Participants also looked ahead to the summit of presidents and prime ministers in Argentina in November, with diplomats from Washington and Buenos Aires staking out subtle but clear differences over the summit recommendations.
Observers alarmed by China's increasing forays into Latin America were reassured by Jiang Shixue, the deputy director of the Institute of Latin American Studies in Beijing, who told a morning panel that China has an economic interest in Latin America, not a political one.
''Any kind of cooperation is for the purpose of business,'' Jiang said, and the Chinese have no intention of ``annoying the U.S.''
Congressional leaders and President Bush have pledged to make immigration reform a top priority in their agenda, although Hurricanes Katrina and Rita have shifted Washington's focus to more urgent matters.
But Jeb Bush wants immigration back in center stage, calling for a loosening of visa rules for foreign students and an overhaul of immigration policy in order not to ''choke off'' international ties.
Bush, the opening speaker at The Herald's 9th annual Americas Conference held at the Biltmore Hotel, said that if he had two ''fairy godmother'' wishes, one would be to create more scholarships for foreign students in order to generate ''a strong cadre of leaders'' overseas with an intimate understanding of the United States, and to make the immigration service more efficient.
Bush noted that tightening of immigration rules was necessary after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, but said enough time has passed for ``a systemic review of policies and procedures.''
''Immigration is vital to our prosperity,'' he said. ``I get a lot of e-mails from people frustrated going through Miami International Airport. It's not as user-friendly as it used to be.''
Bush said he's particularly troubled by the crackdown on foreign student visas as that limits the number of well-educated professionals who go back to their countries with close ties to the United States.
In the conference's keynote address, Venezuelan business leader Gustavo Cisneros, one of the top shareholders of the Univisión television network, also said the government needed to act quickly on immigration.
''There are 42 million Hispanics in the U.S. How many of those are legal? God knows. That has to be resolved,'' he said. ``That would be a good message for Latin Americans.''
He also suggested that the Bush administration form a bipartisan commission to promote Latin American relations and help put the Free Trade Area of the Americas back on the hemisphere's agenda. It could be headed by former presidents Bill Clinton and George Bush, he added.
John Maisto, U.S. envoy to the Organization of American States, spelled out U.S. aspirations for the upcoming summit in Argentina. He said Latin American nations had to reform their economies to make it easier for their citizens to invest and compete in the world, reiterating a Bush administration goal.
The administration, he said, expected the summit to ''express support'' for the Doha round of global talks to lower trade barriers, and produce a ''focused'' agenda.
Asked if President Bush may skip the Argentina summit, as some media reports have suggested, Maisto said that Bush's presence ''certainly is the plan'' but that only the White House could confirm his visit.
Argentina, which has attacked ''neoliberal'' policies espoused by the International Monetary Fund, did not shy away from distancing itself, though subtly, from the U.S. approach.
Rodolfo Gil, Argentina's ambassador to the OAS, said his country's economy had grown strongly in recent years, ``being rebellious . . . from that which Ambassador Maisto was asking for.''
Asked what his message for Bush was at the summit, Gil said many Latin Americans are ''mad'' at the United States because ``during the 1990s they were told -- we would become happy countries; that we would have the American way of life; the American dreams.''
Instead there has been ''more exclusion, more poverty, more alienation,'' Gil added.
The President of Guyana, Bharrat Jagdeo, urged world leaders to help small Caribbean nations cope with surging crime and economic uncertainty. The imminent removal of age-old trade preferences for sugar and bananas could have ''devastating economic consequences and social upheaval,'' he said.
Jagdeo said small countries like Guyana -- with its population of 700,000 people in the lowlands of South America -- cannot compete with large economies that can mass-produce the same products.
He said U.S. policy in the region was inconsistent, citing a U.S. program that helps Guyanese small businesses while at the same time forcing Guyanese rice farmers to compete with cheap subsidized U.S. rice. The U.S. criticizes Guyana's anti-drug program, he added, while giving only $50,000 a year to the impoverished country to help.
''We do not have the resources to deal with these issues,'' he said.
Panamanian President Martín Torrijos touted his country's virtues for investors, moving on from a crippling month-long strike earlier this year.
''Panama is in the center of trade, and this is a century when trade is going to be important,'' Torrijos said. Panama offers ``political stability, financial stability for investments for the American company.''
Panama was dogged earlier this year by a strike held to protest proposed social security reforms. Despite that work stoppage, the economy grew 6 percent by July, the president said.
The conference continues today with speeches by Charles Shapiro, the top acting U.S. diplomat for Latin America; Pedro-Pablo Kuczynski, the prime minister of Peru; Sen. Mel Martínez, the Florida Republican, and OAS Secretary General José Miguel Insulza.
Herald staff writers Jacqueline Charles, Frances Robles and Joe Mozingo contributed to this report.
"But Jeb Bush wants immigration back in center stage, calling for a loosening of visa rules for foreign students and an overhaul of immigration policy in order not to ''choke off'' international ties."
I hear what he is saying but I'd hate to see any other immigration action taken ahead of clamping down on border security - that is priority one.
Exactly. More international students? Priority needs to be fixing a broken system that's already flooded with more immigration, legal and otherwise, than it can handle.
It's time to stop this junk. We need to get fresh ideas and put away these two dynasties-in-the-making. Or, maybe they really are all one dynasty. The Bush-Clinton dynasty has got to go.
''There are 42 million Hispanics in the U.S. How many of those are legal? God knows. That has to be resolved,'' he said. ``That would be a good message for Latin Americans.''
In other words, "Legalize them now, and bring more!" The Bush love affair with all things hispanic continues.
...one would be to create more scholarships for foreign students in order to generate ''a strong cadre of leaders'' overseas with an intimate understanding of the United States...
As someone else noted on a thread why doesn't he offer those scholarships for American stuedents?
"Observers alarmed by China's increasing forays into Latin America were reassured by Jiang Shixue, the deputy director of the Institute of Latin American Studies in Beijing, who told a morning panel that China has an economic interest in Latin America, not a political one."
That's a load of Crap.
I happen to be attending this conference. We're not buying this line. China's strategic objective here is to beat us economically, not militarily. "Nothing to see here, move along..... Don't pay attention to the man behind the curtain"......
Also, it was interesting to note that when any questions were directed toward the good Professor about either human rights or security, he totally refused to answer.
Un(not)believable. Blood is thicker than water.
jeb.bush@myflorida.com
Best as always . . . . Penny
Hey Jeb...come on over to Texas and F'n help yourself. We got bazillions of these legal and illegal clowns eatin' up our system.
Well that settles that, wouldn't vote for him for President.
Guess he and his brother agree on immigration. With all the problems facing the US at this time we certainly don't need to take on more and "relax" any more rules.
Call me an isolationist on this issue, but after 9/11 we don't need any "International Students". Give the onese here in the USA the education.
And BTW Jeb, spend some time with your own kids!
Jeb is great. He is one of the best Govs in the US, if not the best. The brain drain to the US needs to continue.
ping
Fololw the money. Internaitonal students have to pay full tuition, not in-state tuition like some states offer illegal immigrants. The tuition from international students goes straight to the university's bottom line and no tax dollars supplement legal international students. Jeb wants more international students so the univeristy system has more money without increased spending by the state legislature. It's even more important in the graduate science and engineering programs. Not enough U.S. students are enrolling in these programs for the job market.
The problem is that there aren't enough U.S. students going into science and engineering, where most international students go. A lot of graduate programs ar 50-75% foreign students. American kids aren't interested in science or engineering educations as they once were.
Protect our borders and coastlines from all foreign invaders!
Support our Minutemen Patriots!
Be Ever Vigilant ~ Bump!
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After day 2 of the seminar, it appears that the rest of the LATAM speakers as well as US representitives are very amare of China. They are not buying the line either.
The discussions were mostly on economics and finance matters - I really get into that stuff - and was quite ate home listening. Happily, there was very little political; Blather/rhetoric - except when Mel Martinez (R-FL, Senate) conducted a 30 minute VTC speach. He couldn't be there as he was voting on somethin in the Senate. After the first 5 minutes, I completely zoned out. But from the response of the crowd, he said the right things - 50/50 Political policy change/economic policy change.
Thanks for the info. Those who endure tedium to tell us the relevant parts also serve.
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