Posted on 05/29/2007 12:39:11 PM PDT by kellynla
The amnesty deal negotiated by Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.) and the White House has Karl Roves fingerprints all over it. Plain and simple, its bad public policy being used to advance a political agenda.
Weve seen this happen before, most notably in 2003 when Rove and President Bush strong-armed Republicans in Congress into supporting the largest entitlement program since the days of LBJs Great Society. The Medicare prescription drug bill, conservative critics were told, would guarantee Republicans the majority for decades.
Three years later, the GOP was knocked out of power in Congress, and if the party keeps heading down the same path, its destined to lose the White House in 2008.
Youd think Republicans would have learned their lesson when voters sent them packing last Election Day. But as the immigration debate clearly demonstrates, the White House is once again intent on vastly expanding government to achieve a political goal.
Whats remarkable is that attacks on conservatives as restrictionists and nativists were spread not just by liberals last week. The pro-amnesty Wall Street Journal used its editorial page to attack the very people who are trying to defend the rule of law. The Bush administration also hammered away at anyone who questioned the bills amnesty-first approach toward illegal aliens.
Whats driving the White House to fight its base? Bush and Rove have adopted a short-term political plan of wooing Hispanics and a long-range mission to cement the presidents legacy.
As Bush loyalist and former Republican National Committee Chairman Ken Mehlman recently argued, Reaching out to Hispanics is critical to our future. The fastest-growing, and most conservative, segment of the population are natural Republicans. The question is whether we will reach out and welcome these new voters into our ranks.
Mehlman favors a comprehensive approach to immigration reform -- as do many conservatives, including The Heritage Foundation. However, Mehlmans characterizing the policy as a way of welcoming new voters into our ranks reveals whats wrong with using legislation to advance political ends.
Just as Rove had no way of guaranteeing that seniors with the prescription-drug benefit would pull the level for Republicans on Election Day, Mehlman has no way of promising Hispanics will flock to the GOP. And lets face it, Bush wont get credit for this immigration deal even if it does somehow manage to make its way out of Congress and to his desk. The Bush-hating media would paint it as a victory for Democrats -- as well they should, considering all the concessions Kennedy was able to extract.
In fact, after just one week of debate, Senate Democrats are steamrolling the small band of conservative Republicans raising objections to the bill. With Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) wanting to have the debate wrapped up a week after senators return from their Memorial Day vacation, there will be little time to even raise important policy questions.
Senate Republican leaders, some of whom were intricately involved in the negotiations with Kennedy, have capitulated to the Democrats demands. Theyve stalled most amendments from even coming up for a vote. Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), who has offered an amendment to strip the bill of language that would allow gang members to remain in the United States, couldnt get a vote last week. Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) had his amendment to remove the amnesty section of the bill temporarily blocked by fellow Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.).
Its Republicans such as Alexander, who is up for re-election in 2008, who could suffer most for putting politics ahead of policy during the immigration debate. With 21 Republican seats in play next year, and plenty of those senators vulnerable, you would expect them to think twice before making a political calculation that could cost them their job.
Not only is political calculus often mistaken -- as in the case of the Medicare drug benefit -- but it leads to wavering, inconstant leadership subject to the whim of opinion and the dictates of special interests.
When the Senate returns in a week, the temperature in Washington is sure to rise. Even the most conservative senators will be pressured to support the legislation. But as long as politics trumps policy, the so-called grand bargain will still be a grand failure.
Lyndon Baines Bush (LBB) and this generation’s McGeorge Bundy — Mr. Rove — strike again.
I've long thought that the Tennessee GOP could do better than Alexander.
Fat Teddy strikes again! Teddy was the Senate floor manager who pushed through the 1965 Immigration Reform Act. He was also responsible for gutting the IRCA of 1986 of its tough employer sanctions. Fatso Ted has his fingerprints all over the last three major immigration reform measures.
Bush`s downside legacy.
Mehlman is delusional. Along with Martinez, Rove, and Bush.
Too late. The liberal media will spin any deal now as a Democrat plan and victory.
Bush had a Republican Congress and could have secured the borders, then come back to a Republican Congress and they would have given him a guest worker plan, amnesty and citizenship plan. That would have given Bush his legacy and kept Congress in Republican hands, but Bush was determined not to work with fellow Republicans. Now Bush is only too happy to once again partner with Teddy Kennedy.
There is an obviously severe case of cdrug abuse at the white house. Who are these people listening to? If all these illegals had been back home in the last Mexican election we would have a socialist government to the south of us. They are definitely not future republicans and never will be.
CALL! CALL! CALL! CALL! AND KEEP CALLING TILL THE LINES FRY!
WRITE! WRITE! WRITE! WRITE! TILL YOU RUN OUT OF INK IN YOUR PEN!
Bombard the Democrats as well, especially the ones that ran on an anti illegal immigration plank and the ones in marginal districts who could be vulnerable. keep pounding on them.
This amnesty schlock will lead us into a second civil war.
I bet jorge would love that kind of legacy.
The G-d d@mned idiots at the WSJ wrote an editorial a couple of months ago stating that building the wall wasn't the answer, that determined immigrants would find a way here anyway. Of course. Let's just tear down that wall at the Federal Pen in Marion, Illinois too. Determined felons will just find a way around it, so why bother.
I pretty much stopped reading it after that. It truly takes an extreme level of idiocy, arrogance, or both to make those kinds of incredibly stupid statements.
Karl Rove is a delusional idiot that cost the GOP its majorities in Congress with his “big tent” (we stand for everything) and big spending (Medicare D and No Child LEft Behind) policies. His stupidity and hubris cost many Republican officeholders (including my conservative US Senator) their jobs.
His biggest idea, the one that will not only finish the destruction of the GOP, but perhaps begin the destruction of the Republic itself, is “comprehensive immigration reform.”
It takes one to know one, unfortunately. Among those few who still consider Rove brilliant is President Bush.
God save us from such “brilliance.”
Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus
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