Posted on 06/11/2007 9:33:20 PM PDT by familyop
We did what we set out to do: the Senate immigration compromise bill became another Miers Moment for President Bush. Last week conservative political power was asserted more strongly than it had been since we forced the withdrawal of Hapless Harriets nomination to the Supreme Court. We -- which means all of you who took to the phones to call Congress and talk radio, who made the effort to send the thousands of e-mails senators received asking them to opposed the bill -- were the key factor that enabled the bills opponents to prevent passage last week.
We should feel good about this victory. It proved what we all knew but the White House and some Republicans have forgotten: that the "inside the Beltway" crowd takes a huge political risk by ignoring the conservative base of the Republican Party. But we have time only for the briefest of celebrations, because this battle is a long way from won. President Bush, Sen. John McCain and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D.-N.V.) are still determined to pass this awful bill.
While we prepare for the next round, lets not just excoriate the goats who insist that this bill is good for America. And take the time to honor those few who have fought them to a standstill. There were plenty of the former, and just enough of the latter. First, the heroes.
They are workhorses, not show horses. They stood up against the insults from their own President and the likes of Sen. Lindsay Graham (Embarrassment -- S.C.) who memorably called the bills opponents bigots. The few were able to withstand the calumnies of the many in the media, their supposed Senate colleagues and the White House pressure for two reasons. First, they knew they were right. Second, you were there -- in great numbers -- backing their play. Senate phone banks were jammed as calls from all over America flooded in, telling Senators that the compromise wasnt good for America.
Sen. Jeff Sessions (R.-Ala.) fought every step of the way arguing against the bill and its devastating effect on our security and our economy. Fellow conservative Jim DeMint (R.-S.C.) stood athwart the bills path and earning the enmity of the New York Times editorial page by saying, If it hurts the bill, Im for it. (Note to Sen. DeMint: if Pinch, MoDo, and Jill are attacking you, its proof beyond reasonable doubt that youre doing the right thing.)
As always Texas Republican John Cornyn was there to defend conservative principles with intellectual force and political skill. Cornyns amendment to prevent criminals from obtaining amnesty was a poison pill to the amnesty crowd. And -- credit given where due -- Sen. Byron Dorgan (D.-N.D.) fought hard to place some rational limit on the guest worker program. If he sticks to his guns, he may be the next Joe Lieberman, outcast from the Democratic Party of Nancy Pelosi, Harry Reid and Howard Dean. Which isn't at all a bad thing.
All four were helped by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R.-Ky.), without whose political management the bill might have passed. Laurels to The Fab Five, and sour apples to the goats. The usual suspects are the goats, but there are standouts among them, from President Bush and Sen. McCain to Sen. Jon Kyl and McCains acolyte, Lindsay Graham.
Driving John McCains getaway car, Lindsay Graham took to the Senate floor Wednesday night to beg for help from his pals, Ted Kennedy and Barack Obama. At issue was Obamas amendment to shorten the preference for skilled immigrants over family members. Apparently surprised that he had been used like a rented mule, Graham whined that Obamas amendment undercut, everybody over here who's walked the plank and told our base, 'You're wrong." Graham is -- we hope justifiably -- scared of the backlash that may come from South Carolina conservatives when he seeks reelection next year.
For Graham to have learned from this experience is, Im sure, too much to hope for. Neither the President nor John McCain have learned. On Sunday, McCain -- on "ABC with Stephanopoulos" -- blamed this temporary defeat on, "The more conservative, anti-immigrant, anti legislation group..." (apparently Cornyn, Sessions and DeMint), "...backed up by a vocal group of people that were supporting them," (that would be us, folks).
White House Press Secretary Tony Snow defended the bill, emphasizing that the President would give it another push. But he also told CBSs Bob Schieffer that the White House realized that people have concerns about border security and that, weve heard you. Though we will always think of Tony as a friend, the only answer to that is, prove it. Build Duncan Hunters fence.
In the June 5 Republican candidates debate, Hunter criticized both the Senate bill and the Bush administration for not building the already-legislated fence along the Mexican border. He labeled the Senate bill disastrous and said that border enforcement is a national security issue. And he talked about the fence he championed: the Hunter bill, which was signed by the president on the 26th of October, mandating 854 miles of double fence -- not that scraggly little fence you show on CNN all the time, Wolf, that people get across so easily -- if they get across my fence, we sign them up for the Olympics immediately. Weve got a big fence. But 854 miles of double border fence was mandated to be constructed. Homeland Security has a billion bucks, cash on hand. Its been six months, and theyve done 11 miles.
There is no need for further legislation to build those 854 miles of fence (or to take many other measures to improve border security.) In the debate, Hunter said the Bush administration has a case of the slows on building that fence. If the President really has heard us, he could cure that with one phone call to Homeland Security Secretary Chertoff.
Please make that call, Mr. President. It wont buy our support for that awful Senate bill, or end this Miers Moment for you. But it would prove what Tony Snow said was true.
If they could award the contract to rino inc. they could use guest workers to build the fence Americans(congress)don’t want to build.
Yes, he’s clearly not an actor like another unannounced candidate who doesn’t want to have to campaign and answer the tough questions.
I think it’s a great idea, blam! Good luck!
Pandsey Graham is about to find out what happens when you backstab the conservative base in South Carolina. After he’s kicked to the curb next year, he can go hang out with the other great South Carolina turncoat, David Weaseley, and they can cry in their sweet tea over how unfair it all is.
}:-)4
A tagline? How about, “his boyfriend still likes him!”.
I wonder how much longer we can count on McConnell. If Bush goes for one more surge on the immigration issue, how will McConnell react to his wife, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao, who will support the bill?
-PJ
Trent Lott said when PRAISING TEDDY, “When you go head to head with Kennedy, you better bring your lunch, cause you’re going to learn something”! LOL! Kennedy’s going to EAT YOUR LUNCH, Sen. IDIOT!
Protect and support our American workers!
No Amnesty ~ Not Now ~ Not Ever!
If Dubya could only figure out how to make it a toll fence and put his Mexican pals in charge of a fence commission, it’d have been up in weeks.
If I still lived in Lowndesboro, I'd be there -- complete with my bib overalls, straw hat and gapped teeth.
Just sent in $100....thanks for the ping!
Hunter has several times that’s how he planned to get it done so quickly: hire private contractors to work on various sections of the fence at once.
6 months. But at this pace now, we are talking 40 years. Yikes.
Another version of "I feel your pain." Empty words.
You've shown us to not trust you. To reinstate that trust, you'll have to PROVE that you've "heard us" by acting on our demands.
If you pat us on our heads with "we've heard you," and you still pass this bill, history will know you for a liar and a scheming cheat.
If you drop the bill, you will begin to heal the distrust.
Excellent! Make some great “where’s the fence” and Enforce current laws” signs!
Duncan Hunter Today on Lou Dobbs:
“BORDER SECURITY SHOULD NOT BE CONDITIONED ON AMNESTY!”
But what about the fact that Bush (who Babbin and other border unappeasables paint as a VILLIAN) is trying to speed up construction of border fencing by setting aside requirements for interminable meetings with locals, and threatening to veto any legislation that would reimpose them, while Cornyn (who Babbin and other border unappeasables paint as a HERO) is trying to mandate such meetings, which will inevitably slow construction of the fence and possibly even get it quashed in some places. See:
White House opposes mandated local input on border fence
Of course Bush will get no credit for this, and Cornyn no blame. It doesn't fit the template, and alas many conservatives lately have become as fanatical and intellectually dishonest about putting the template before the facts as any NYTimes reporter ever was.
Since that only makes good sense,there is no freaking way it will happen like that.
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