Posted on 07/30/2010 5:44:38 PM PDT by GOPGuide
A tantalizing bit of 2012 gossip dropped way, way down in an otherwise fun piece about amnesty shills boo-hooing over having (temporarily) lost McCain. Note to Politico: This is whats called burying the lede.
Their hope now is that Republican presidential candidates and former operatives under Bush, a reform proponent, can convince GOP congressional leaders that the issue needs to be dealt with before 2012 or that they could risk alienating the burgeoning Hispanic vote in the crucial swing states of New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada, Arizona and Florida.
Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, a front-runner for the nomination, has signaled quietly to Graham that Republicans must address immigration before the campaign heats up, according to several sources familiar with the conversation.
Grahams push against birthright citizenship prompted this response on POLITICOs Arena from Cesar Conda, a former domestic policy adviser to Vice President Dick Cheney: If the Republican Party embraces ending birthright citizenship, then it will be assured losing Latino and ethnic voters and presidential elections for the foreseeable future.
Now Im more confused than ever about why Grahams pushing the birthright citizenship amendment. If he really is thinking about trying to settle the immigration issue before 2012 which may be do-able, given the electoral pressure from Latinos that the GOP leadership will be feeling what does he gain by staking out a position further to the right than hes ever gone before? I have to assume that its precisely because he thinks a deal is likely that he wants to stockpile conservative demands now so that he can give up on them early in the interests of compromise. If he sacrifices birthright citizenship in the interests of being reasonable but stands firm on securing the border first, itll give the Dems some cover on agreeing to the latter. In fact, Politico notes that his comprehensive bill co-written with Schumer already would have made amnesty contingent on first reaching certain benchmarks vis-a-vis border security; Grahams now insisting that thats no longer enough, that he wants a separate borders only bill before amnesty comes back on the table, but Ive got a crazy hunch that hes just staking out a bargaining position there too.
As for Mitts role in this, its not like hes nudging Graham to strike a deal on his behalf. Getting immigration off the table would, in theory, benefit whoever the eventual nominee is. But suspicions about him among the righty base plus the fact that its Grahamnesty, of all people, that hes coordinating with here instead of, say, Jim DeMint isnt going to win him any new fans. Exit question: Any fallout over this for him, or no biggie?
Those Latinos who vote for whoever keeps the border wide open are worthless trash. Reaching out to them is like reaching out for turds. Reach out for Americans who believe in America. There are plenty of Latinos who will vote for the candidate who stands for America First.
But if we are seen reaching out to those who riot and protest instead of those who work and respect the law, then we lose both.
I really like the NJ governor. That is about it.
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