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Bilbray's experience gives him edge [In key House race for GOP]
The North County Times (CA) ^ | 5/28/06 | Editorial endorsement

Posted on 05/30/2006 10:02:13 AM PDT by Gothmog

By: North County Times - Editorial Our view: In close race for 50th District seat, former congressman just better than Busby

The race between Francine Busby and Brian Bilbray in the 50th Congressional District presents voters with an unusually good pair of choices. Both are much closer to the center of the nation's political spectrum than its fringes, and both are very strong candidates on their own merits.

Running a strong reform campaign in a district shamed by Randy "Duke" Cunningham, Democrat Busby offers voters a genuinely fresh face with solid credentials. Bilbray's strengths are his pragmatism, command of the issues and experience on Capitol Hill. To fill out the last six months of the criminal Cunningham's unexpired term, Bilbray's experience at all levels of government gives him a decisive edge over the less-experienced Busby.

In an era of states Red and Blue, somehow the fates have conspired to bring before the 50th District two candidates whose positions are rather purple and surprisingly similar.

Both support a woman's right to choose, though Bilbray opposes late-term abortions. Both support stem cell research. Both support the medicinal use of marijuana, though Bilbray doesn't support California's Proposition 215, but instead would favor it if marijuana could be obtained and regulated like other prescription drugs.

Both support raising the federal minimum wage; Bilbray voted for it in 2000 as U.S. representative for South County.

Both oppose drilling for oil or natural gas off California's shores. Both talk like deficit hawks, but Bilbray believes slowing the rate of government-spending growth will be enough to balance our federal books.

Both support ethics reform on Capitol Hill, including the banning of anonymous "earmarks," through which representatives routinely squeeze pork out of already approved spending bills. Bilbray's idea to insulate federal spending from campaign pressure ---- shifting the federal government to a two-year budget cycle ---- isn't sexy, but it's the kind of pragmatic and promising proposal 50th District voters can expect from him.

Although both wallowed in the mud slung by their respective national congressional committees, both Bilbray and Busby recently distanced themselves from attack ads that North County voters didn't want and didn't need. Bilbray went one step further, explicitly disavowing the most shameful slur hurled at Busby.

Both agree that the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq must be gradual and pegged to progress on the ground, not dictated by artificial and easily exploited timetables. Both said they would defy the public's will in order to support the Marines' mission to hold their ground at Miramar in the face of the airport authority's advances.

Bilbray's three terms representing the 49th District, which before 2002 covered areas south of North County, have prepared him to quickly deliver for the 50th District. His six years of seniority should enable him to secure coveted committee posts ---- Bilbray told us he would seek appointment to the House Foreign Relations Committee and the Energy and Commerce's subcommittee on Energy and Air Quality. Vice President Dick Cheney reportedly recommended Bilbray for what will be the most important committee in Congress this summer ---- the group charged with resolving the differences between the House and Senate immigration reform packages. Bilbray knows how to get things done on Capitol Hill, and equally important, he knows the right people.

The Republican majority with whom Bilbray swept into office in 1994 now dominates the House leadership. Before an ugly impeachment, the bursting of the dot-com bubble and 9/11, that group was able to work with President Clinton to rein in government spending and deliver unprecedented federal surpluses.

Bilbray's long experience in local government ---- elected mayor of Imperial Beach at age 27, he also served as San Diego County supervisor from 1985 through 1995 ---- will enable him to work well with North County's other elected leaders. His work with the California Air Resources Board gives him a policy wonk's appreciation for the shortcomings of today's supposed smog savior, the corn-derived additive ethanol.

Bilbray will work to bring down our soaring gas prices not by grandstanding about price-gouging, but by fixing the market constraints that keep Southern California filling up with a blend of gas that can't be sold or used elsewhere. Expand that less-polluting blend throughout California, Bilbray argues, and North County's pump prices will benefit. He also recognizes that new nuclear technology might be necessary for the nation to limit its carbon emissions and stave off the worst effects of climate change.

If Busby's big issue is ethics, Bilbray's is immigration. There we side with Busby's position of combining increased enforcement with opportunities to earn citizenship for many of the estimated 12 million illegal immigrants already here. But Bilbray is probably more moderate than his fiery rhetoric suggests, likely a nod to the Republican right, whose support he needs to win on June 6. While Bilbray supports the enforcement-only approach, he stops short of the more outlandish elements of the House immigration stance. He opposes, for instance, making illegal presence in this country a felony and criminal penalties for people who offer aid and comfort to ailing immigrants.

Voters in the 50th District are blessed with two strong candidates. Francine Busby is a likable, improving candidate who has run a spirited campaign; it wouldn't be a tragedy if she won the seat.

But the North County Times endorses Brian Bilbray, a proven leader who can hit the ground running in Washington, D.C.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: 2006election; 50th; bilbray; electionushouse; gophousemajority
Gotta love the way the Times covers up for Busby on taxes:

"Both talk like deficit hawks, but Bilbray believes slowing the rate of government-spending growth will be enough to balance our federal books."

Hmmm, the Times doesn't mention Busby's solution. Could it be...to raise taxes?

1 posted on 05/30/2006 10:02:17 AM PDT by Gothmog
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To: Gothmog

Based on this article the only real differences between these two is that one has a D after his name and the other one has an R.


2 posted on 05/30/2006 10:07:32 AM PDT by saganite (Billions and billions and billions-------and that's just the NASA budget!)
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To: saganite

Except one will vote for Dennis Hastert for Speaker and one will vote for, and with, Nancy Pelosi. Which would you choose? It's a moderate district that prefers centrists of both parties.


3 posted on 05/30/2006 10:13:01 AM PDT by Dems_R_Losers (Control the borders. Control the spending. Confirm the judges. Win the War. -- Hugh Hewitt)
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To: Dems_R_Losers

And one will move the House closer to making John Conyers chair of the House Judiciary Committee, and one will help keep Conyers out.


4 posted on 05/30/2006 10:17:46 AM PDT by Kenny Bunkport (As the Democrat Party becomes more evil, the GOP becomes more stupid. What's a voter to do?)
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To: Gothmog
Although it is not our district, my wife and I are making "get out the vote" phone calls to help. Have lots of friends in Duke's old district and quite a few are apathetic because of the scandal.
5 posted on 05/30/2006 10:19:11 AM PDT by ncountylee (Dead terrorists smell like victory)
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To: saganite
Bilbray is going to have McCain come in and give him some
of that OBL money. You wonder why they vote the way they do.


Wednesday, May 31

Breakfast with U.S. Senator John McCain honoring Brian Bilbray,
Candidate for US Congress, CA-50
7:30am Private Reception, includes Photo Opportunity $1,000 per person
8:00am Breakfast, $250 per person

Westgate Hotel, Versailles Ballroom
1055 Second Street, San Diego 92101


http://maps.google.com/maps?oi=map&q=1055+Second+Street,+San+Diego,+CA+92101

I would like to show up with some mariachi music and the Mexican national anthem to serenade Mr. McCain.

Does anyone on the Bilbray campaign understand that McCain just sold us out on the immigration issue? The answer is: they don't care they just want the money.

Freemail me if you want to show up and let him feel out pain.

6 posted on 05/30/2006 10:23:57 AM PDT by fearthebase
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To: ncountylee

Good for you, good luck and thanks. I live nowhere near the area and have no local interest, but I am interested in seeing the lib dems and media have to rein in all their 'dem congress takeover in 2006' rhetoric. It's getting very annoying.


7 posted on 05/30/2006 10:33:31 AM PDT by Gothmog
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To: Gothmog

If i was a voter in this district i would hold my nose and vote for Bilbray.


8 posted on 05/30/2006 10:45:58 AM PDT by DM1
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To: Gothmog

Bilbray's hard stance against Illegals and the border
when he was in congress in the 1990s

Co-sponsored bill to stop giving
U.S. citizenship to more than 200,000
‘anchor babies’ of illegal aliens each year 1999-2000.
Rep. Bilbray took a stand against one of the largest sources of U.S. population growth and against one of the strongest incentives for illegal immigration by co-sponsoring H.R.73 (the Bilbray Bill). As a matter of policy for decades, the federal government has granted citizenship to babies born to illegal-alien mothers. This is a pronounced reward to their mothers for having entered or stayed in the United States in violation of immigration laws. Not only do the mothers immediately get access to a whole array of social services for their babies, but these illegal aliens get a virtual guarantee that they will never be asked to leave the country. These babies of illegal aliens are called “anchor babies” because they act as an anchor to eventually pull large extended families into the United States. Rep. Bilbray wants to put an end to this enticement for citizens of other nations to become illegal aliens in this country. H.R.73 would have denied citizenship to babies of women who at the time of giving birth are in the U.S. as illegal aliens, tourists, temporary foreign workers, foreign students and diplomats. The only exception is if the mother is married to the father of the baby, and the father is a U.S. citizen or lawfully admitted permanent resident alien. This will reduce legal U.S. population growth considerably. A California study in 1992 found 96,000 new citizens were added in that year in that state alone through these ‘anchor babies’ of illegal aliens. U.S. Census data on the birthrates of the foreign born indicate that well over 200,000 new citizens are added to the U.S. each year through anchor babies. See detailed description.





Co-sponsored legislation to stop rewarding children
of illegal aliens with citizenship 1997-1998.
Rep. Bilbray co-sponsored H.R. 7, the Citizenship Reform Act of 1997 that would have put an end to the automatic granting of citizenship to babies born to illegal aliens in the United States. This policy grants citizenship to some 200,000 additional people a year according to U.S. Census data. Not only do these births represent additional U.S. population growth, but because the babies of illegal aliens are U.S. citizens, they can then act as 'anchors' to eventually pull a large number of extended family members into the country legally.





Co-sponsored bill to deny citizenship
to ’anchor babies’ of illegal aliens 1995-1996.
In the 104th Congress, Rep. Bilbray joined 44 other Representatives in co-sponsoring H.R.1363 (the Bilbray Bill) to halt the automatic granting of U.S. citizenship to babies born to illegal-alien mothers in the United States. The House leadership did not bring the bill to a vote.



Voted in 2000 to authorize troops on the border.

Rep. Bilbray acted to enforce the border by voting for the Traficant amendment to H.R.4205. This amendment authorizes the Secretary of Defense, under certain circumstances, to assign members of the Armed Forces to assist the INS with border control duties. The Traficant amendment passed by a vote of 243 to 183, but the Clinton Administration never chose to exercise this power.



Signed a letter to Speaker Hastert opposing an illegal alien amnesty in 2000.

Rep. Bilbray, along with 52 other Republican Representatives took a stand against illegal immigration by signing a Dear Colleague letter from Representative Tom Tancredo to Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert. The letter expressed opposition to an illegal alien amnesty for more than 2 million illegal aliens in an end-of-session appropriations bill. This show of opposition was an important ingredient in the Speaker taking a firm stand against Pres. Clinton's amnesty and in the ultimate defeat of the proposed amnesty.



Voted to authorize the use of troops on the border in 1999
Rep. Bilbray voted in favor of the Traficant amendment to H.R. 1401. This amendment authorized the Secretary of Defense, under certain circumstances, to assign members of the Armed Forces to assist the Border Patrol and Customs Service only in drug interdiction and counter terrorism activities along our borders. The Traficant amendment passed by a vote of 242 to 181.





Voted to crack down on
illegal immigration in 1996
Rep. Bilbray was part of a 333-87 majority which passed H.R.2202. It was a large omnibus bill with dozens of provisions aimed at reducing illegal immigration. It authorized major increases in the border patrol forces. But it also had many provisions aimed at making life more miserable for illegal aliens who manage to get into the country, half of whom arrive with legal visas but then illegally overstay. Until passage of the bill, a person could be apprehended as an illegal alien, be deported and then turn around and come back to the U.S. on a legal student, tourist, worker or relative visa. After the bill, an illegal alien was barred from any kind of legal entry for 10 years.




Tried to create mandatory workplace verification programs in 1996
Rep. Bilbray was one of only 86 Representatives who took the tougher-on-illegal-immigration side during the voting on the Gallegly Amendment to H.R.2202. He voted IN FAVOR of the amendment which would have made pilot workplace verification programs (see above) mandatory in five of the top seven immigration states. The amendment failed 86-331 under complaints that businesses and states should have more choice in whether they participated in workplace programs to keep illegal aliens from taking jobs.



















9 posted on 05/30/2006 2:45:31 PM PDT by SoCalPol (.We Need a Border Fence Now.)
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To: Dems_R_Losers; All
It's a moderate district that prefers centrists of both parties.

Bull. The disgraced Cunningham has a ACU lifetime rating of 94%. Bilbray is the GOP choice because the party bosses pushed him for name recognition and prior Congressional experience (different district which truly is Dem/RINO suited). He barely edged a candidate running as a conservative (Roach) and was blown away in vote total by the top 3 running as conservatives Roach, Morrow & Kaloogian.

Disclosure: I live in the district.

10 posted on 05/30/2006 6:50:40 PM PDT by newzjunkey (Don't use illegals: HIREPATRIOTS.COM)
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