Posted on 08/10/2009 5:33:23 PM PDT by fiodora
http://profiles.numbersusa.com/improfile.php3?DistSend=TX&VIPID=1081
Voted in favor of motion to invoke cloture on S. 2611 to increase overall immigration numbers and reward illegal aliens with amnesty in 2006
Sen. Cornyn voted in favor of a motion to invoke cloture on S. 2611, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006. The motion to invoke cloture was a procedural move to ends debate on S. 2611. If the motion had been rejected by at least 40 Senators, Majority Leader Bill Frist, MD (R-TN) would have had to choose between continued debate on S. 2611 and moving on to other legislative business. If the motion had failed, Sen. Frist was expected to move on to other legislative business, thus effectively killing the bill. S. 2611 provides an indirect path to citizenship for illegal aliens. S. 2611 also provides for major increases in temporary worker visas and permanent immigrant visas. It provides for at least an additional 100,000 H-1B visas annually; an additional 325,000 new guestworker visas (H-5A/H-2C visas); a one-time-only permanent increase of 310,660. In addition, the S. 2611 includes amnesty for an estimated 10.2 million illegal aliens (about 6.7 million illegal alien workers and 3.5 million illegal aliens spouse and/or children). The cloture motion passed by a vote of 73 to 25.
Cosponsored a bill in 2007 to encourage illegal immigration
Sen. Cornyn cosponsored S. 422, the Secure Border Crossing Card Entry Act of 2007. This bill would have established parity between Mexican nationals who possessed a valid biometric Border Crossing Card (BCC [also known as a laser visa]), who have completed the necessary security checks (a rarity in todays lax enforcement environment), who visit the United States and Canadian visitors by allowing BCC bearers to remain in the United States for up to six months (Mexican nationals with BCCs may only stay in the United States for up to 30 days, while Canadians possessing tourist visas may stay up to one year); would have retained DHS authority to set the length of time those with BCCs may remain in the United States; would have authorized that agency to modify the length of admission on a case-by-case basis if good cause exists; and would have made a Mexican national inadmissible for the BCC admission period if: (1) he/she was inadmissible as a nonimmigrant; (2) he/she had previously violated his/her nonimmigrant status; or (3) the BCC was not processed through a machine reader at the U.S. port of entry. Sen. John Cornyn (R-T exas) was the measures main sponsor.
Cornyn has been weak on immigration since at least 2000 (that’s when I noticed it)
>>He opposed the 2007 amnesty did he not? I dont remember him pushing for it - in fact, quite the opposite.,<<
I do. in 2000 or maybe 2001. I’m from Texas.
So now that he has met such resistance to simultaneously ramming through unread bills, he's now going to be gracious enough to try to ram them through one at a time.
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