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Border compromise no hit with state GOP officials (AZ GOP Chrmn Pullen Gets Mail)
East Valley Tribune and Associated Press ^ | May 22, 2007 | Paul Giblin, Tribune

Posted on 05/22/2007 7:01:39 PM PDT by bd476


Border compromise no hit with state GOP officials

Paul Giblin, Tribune

May 22, 2007

The Senate’s bipartisan immigration reform package is flopping badly with leaders of the Arizona Republican Party, said state party chairman Randy Pullen on Monday.

Party officials have received “hundreds” of letters, e-mails and telephone calls from Republicans since Sens. Jon Kyl and John McCain, R-Ariz., and Sen. Edward Kennedy, DMass., and others introduced the compromise measure in Washington on Thursday, Pullen said.

To illustrate the point at a press conference, Pullen displayed a letter with a drawing of a fist and finger making an obscene gesture.

To ensure that the message was understood, the letter’s author used a blue highlighter to color in the extended digit, and jotted the message, “Here is my middle finger.”

“This basically is the outlook that many of our party faithful are feeling right now about the Republican Party,” Pullen said.

At least some members of the party appear to be taking their cues from the state party chairman himself.

During the weekend, he posted a statement on his blog that starts: “On behalf of the more than 1 million registered Arizona Republicans who care very deeply about this state and have tremendous love for our great nation, I am very disappointed in this new legislation.”

The state party also emailed the 1½-page statement to 86,000 people in its database.

Despite the unrest within the party, Pullen and members of his staff have been working to soothe party members who are upset about the immigration bill and Arizona’s senators, he said.

“I’ve got to tell you, when you have people coming in every day, tearing up their registration cards and throwing them on the floor or changing their registrations from Republican to independent, it’s a little bit disconcerting,” he said.

A better program would have provided increased border security without packaging it with immigration reform, he said.

Furthermore, a better program would have extended consideration to the length of time illegal immigrants have lived in the United States when determining eligibility for granting legal status, Pullen said.

Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., defended Kyl, one of the chief architects of the immigration reform package, as a conservative Republican.

“This is a conservative bill. What people haven’t appreciated fully yet — and I think they will when they step back and actually see the language — is that Kyl won some big concessions on this for some areas of real concern,” Flake told the Tribune.

Among those provisions:

• A temporary worker program that limits the amount of time foreign workers may spend in the United States.

• The “touch-back” provision that requires heads of households to return to their native countries to apply for citizenship.

• An end of “chain migration,” an immigration platform that awards citizenship status based largely on ties to family members who already are U.S. citizens. The new bill calls for the selection process for future immigrants to be based on a points system that rewards employment criteria, education and knowledge of English.

“The notion that this is amnesty when the fastest anybody could get citizenship is 13 or 14 years is just crazy,” Flake said.

“This is a conservative bill. I don’t think it’s conservative at all to just ignore the problem and pretend to solve it by doing something at the border.”

Meanwhile, the bill received generally favorable reviews from the Valley Interfaith Project.

The bill is an important first step, vice president Dick White said. He called on Kyl and Mc-Cain to guide the bill through Congress until it’s signed into law by President Bush.

In no state would passage of this bill have more impact than in Arizona, White said. Our border would become more secure, 500,000 undocumented immigrants would have a path to citizenship, high school students would benefit from the inclusion of the Dream Act, and our agriculture industry would have the workers they need, he said.



TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Arizona
KEYWORDS: aliens; amnesty; immigrantlist; immigration; randypullen
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To: bd476
“This is a conservative bill. What people haven’t appreciated fully yet... Kyl won some big concessions on this for some areas of real concern,” Flake told the Tribune.

This amnesty bill is crap! Apparently Kyl and Jeff Flake believe if you add a bit of sugar to a pile of crap it becomes table food.

Secure the borders first, for all the world to see.
After proving they're serious about border security for a year or two, only then do we start talking about guest worker plans, amnesty and citizenship.

41 posted on 05/23/2007 9:52:18 AM PDT by RJL
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To: stephenjohnbanker

No they do. Especially if it provides them with foodstamps, welfare and other “free stuff”.


42 posted on 05/23/2007 9:52:48 AM PDT by bmw_n_me (Keep working! Millions depend on your welfare!)
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To: bmw_n_me

“No they do. Especially if it provides them with foodstamps, welfare and other “free stuff”.”

They are getting these now!


43 posted on 05/23/2007 10:20:15 AM PDT by stephenjohnbanker ( Hunter/Thompson/Thompson/Hunter in 08! "Read my lips....No new RINO's" !!)
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To: Reaganwuzthebest
>> Somewhere I read that Kyl stated in a few years people will forget about it and vote GOP again as if nothing happened. It’s just incredible arrogance from these sellouts. <<

Having been on FR during Monicagate and remembering the legions of freepers who vowed to "never again" vote for anyone who opposed Clinton's impeachment, I wouldn't be surprised if Kyl's prediction was accurate.

Congressman Peter King was the no. #1 Clinton defender in the GOP back in 1999. He has never apologized for his actions or said he was wrong. See if you hear about any "primary challengers" to him lately. Better yet, go on any contemporary thread about Peter King and see how many freepers even diss the guy.

44 posted on 05/23/2007 2:09:04 PM PDT by BillyBoy (Don't blame Illinois for Pelosi, we elected ROSKAM)
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To: BillyBoy

Even if Kyl is right, and this time I don’t believe he is long-term the democrats will dominate politics because the amnestied are going to vote for them in large numbers. Texas, Florida, and Arizona will become permanently blue just as NY and California already are.


45 posted on 05/23/2007 2:14:11 PM PDT by Reaganwuzthebest
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To: bd476
Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., defended Kyl, one of the chief architects of the immigration reform package, as a conservative Republican.

“This is a conservative bill. What people haven’t appreciated fully yet — and I think they will when they step back and actually see the language — is that Kyl won some big concessions on this for some areas of real concern,” Flake told the Tribune

Flake, once again, lives up to his name.


46 posted on 05/23/2007 11:27:44 PM PDT by kstewskis ("Tolerance is what happens when one loses their principles"....Fr. A. Saenz)
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