Posted on 05/23/2013 7:54:20 AM PDT by Qbert
Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, whose immigration reform proposal would grant far-reaching powers to the Secretary of Homeland Security and other top administration officials, says he does not trust Washington DC to make critical decisions about the nations future.
Rubio made the comment Wednesday during a debate on the budget and the debt limit. He opposes including an increase in the debt limit in the new budget and wants to make sure that no increase comes out of a House-Senate conference committee. The problem, Rubio said in an impassioned floor speech, is that there has been in the past a bipartisan consensus to increase federal spending, and the debt limit along with it.
What I am concerned about is the regular order of doing things in this city, where the debt limit has been raised consistently, without any conversation about the fact that this government borrows 40 cents out of every dollar that it spends, Rubio said. My concern is that I do not have trust in Washington DC. I dont care whos in charge.
Despite that lack of trust on fiscal issues, Rubio places enormous trust in Washington when it comes to handling immigration. His 867-page reform proposal gives the Secretary of Homeland Security great discretion in maintaining border security, internal enforcement, the legalization of currently illegal immigrants, and dozens of other issues. A quick search reveals that the bill uses the words the Secretary about 1,050 times. Thats a lot of emphasis on Washington, DC.
And even when Rubio proposes to place power outside of Washington as in his proposal to hand over border security to a commission if the Secretary of Homeland Security has not succeeded in enforcing it he still places a lot of trust in Washington. The commission, Rubio has said, is not a Washington commission, made up of congressmen or bureaucrats. Its largely led by the border state governors, who have a vested local interest in ensuring that that border is secure. But Rubios bill specifies that the commission will have ten members, of whom six will be appointed by the president or members of Congress, while the other four will be either the governor of a border state or someone the governor delegates. Even Rubios non-Washington commission would be a mostly Washington commission.
Perhaps in his remarks Wednesday Rubio was referring narrowly to the budget and debt ceiling, and he in fact places great trust in Washington to handle other issues. But Washington has, by general consensus, a terrible record on immigration. In coming weeks, Rubio will have to make the case that Washington should be trusted with broad new powers in handling millions of immigrants even as he makes just the opposite case when it comes to fiscal issues.
Rubio ... Rubio ... I remember that name. Didn’t he used to be a conservative?
BTW, that Immigration Bill that came out of committee gives lie to the commercials using your voice to tout the same. Have you disavowed it yet?
That is EXACTLY why the Founding Fathers gave We the People the Bill of Rights. Unfortunately, most of the jackasses in the District of Corruption are slowly convincing the dumbies out here that the Bill of Rights are old and outdated.
Attempting to be a Cruz Copycat.
Gonna have to do a lot better than that.
Nothing like another 800 page law to rebuild that trust thing.
“Look at me! Look at me! I can sound like Cruz too!”
ffffft..
Yep. Pretty slimy if you ask me.
Yet he’s trying to encourage us to believe in the government’s will and ability to track illegals, secure the border, deny illegals benefits, ensure they don’t vote, pay a fine, etc. We wants US to trust D.C.... while he doesn’t?
That doesn’t play anymore, Marco.
Bandwagon effect...
We=He
Don’t worry about it Marco, you won’t be there much longer.
Weasel.
Mr. Rubio, we the people no longer trust you either.
Rubio is dead to me.
Rubio, go look in the mirror and see whom you are really lying to.
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