Posted on 01/22/2002 9:20:32 PM PST by traditionalist
A story in the Jan. 10 Los Angeles Times ("Wave of U.S. immigration likely to survive Sept. 11") observes: "The most significant development in the national immigrant debate is what hasn't happened: No lawmaker of influence has moved to reverse the country's generous immigration policy, which for more than three decades has facilitated the largest sustained wave of immigration in U.S. history."
That policy is getting even more generous. And Republicans, of all people, are now playing Jolly Old St. Nick to huddled masses (legal and illegal), despite mounting evidence that immigration is poison for the party.
In the 2000 election, Al Gore carried five of the seven states with the largest numbers of foreign born. He lost the sixth, Florida, by a hair, due to the anomaly of the Cuban-American vote. Bush took all 10 of the states with the lowest immigrant populations.
Their senses dulled by a multicultural binge, Republicans can't connect the dots. Because the GOP is still minimally identified with American values, it cannot successfully compete for the affection of immigrant voters, who are more interested in handouts than tax cuts.
But, heedless of this reality, in his 2003 budget (to be submitted to Congress in February) Bush reportedly will call for restoring food stamps to 363,000 legal immigrants -- a benefit non-citizens lost in the 1996 welfare reform.
It's estimated the change will cost $2.1 billion over the next decade. But then, food-stamp use expands in a recession. Plus, more benefits will encourage more immigration. So the price tag is open-ended.
Do we really want to encourage immigrants to come here and go on the dole? Whatever happened to the concept of not giving visas to those who might become a public charge?
Because they are poorer and less educated, the foreign-born are already above-average consumers of government services. Currently, 21 percent of immigrant households use at least one major welfare program, compared to 15 percent of native-born families.
Earlier this month, Secretary of State Colin Powell met with his Mexican counterpart to see about getting another amnesty for illegal aliens (excuse me, "undocumented workers") back on track. Prior to Sept. 11, Bush was pushing for legal status for 3.5 million of these lawbreakers.
Illegal immigrants are already coming at an annual rate of half a million. Just as the 1986 amnesty (which "adjusted the status" of 2.7 million) helped generate the following waves of illegals, another amnesty would add fuel to the fire that rages on our borders.
More than any other factor, immigration is transforming America.
Between 1990 and 2000, while the nation grew by 13 percent, our foreign-born population increased over 50 percent. Steve Camarota of the Center for Immigration Studies estimates that immigrants and their children born here accounted for two-thirds of all population growth in the 1990s.
Unlike immigrants of the past, all too often the new immigrants aren't assimilating. Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., says: "There are too many coming in too quickly. And with multiculturalism and bilingualism in the schools, it's not a melting-pot mentality. It's a Bosnia mentality."
Still, Bush and his political strategist Karl Rove continue to pursue the illusive Hispanic vote, mesmerized by the fact that the president took 35 percent of that vote in 2000, compared to the 21 percent Dole got in 1996. They forget that Reagan received an even higher percentage in both of his campaigns, without pandering.
Whil losing two-thirds of Hispanics, the president won just 54 percent of the non-minority vote. He won't expand that base with food stamps for legal immigrants and amnesties for illegals.
The Times story quotes Doris Meissner, Clinton's commissioner of the Immigration and Nationalization Service, who cliams current immigration policy "reflects a sort of wise and grown-up attitude on the part of Americans."
Besides reflecting liberal condescension, Meissner's evaluation is dead wrong. Americans never voted for a generous immigration policy. In poll after poll, the public demands stringent controls. But due to the Republican default, voters have no choice here. On immigration, the GOP is duh.
Helloooooooo...2/3rds of "Hispanics" voted AGAINST Bush (I betsa the 1/3rd who voted FOR Bush were either A. BORN in the United States and raised on american values, or B. LEGALIZED citizens who worked their butts off to assimulate and pursue the American dream)
Pandering DOES NOT WORK. Republicans, wake up and ENFORSE the platform on immigration control you've had for 120 years!
The Stupid Party stumbles on.
What passes for common sense seems to be lost on the Bush Administration.
I wish I could say it better. I can't.
The difference between Reagan and Bush is that Reagan was nobodys fool.
No, that's Dubya.
Well said!
Great insight. I'd be surprised if most Hispanics did not see this as cynical pandering. It's not like they have never seen this before from the democrats. I sense the idiocy of Karl Rove in this.
This Mexican told O Rielly that America is a nation of immigrants and that he, O Rielly was holding onto a past dream of America that is long gone. How very global of him eh? Maybe Bush wants to go down in history as the President that moved America into the global net. He thinks he will be thanked for that maybe. Fat chance.
It's been obvious for decades that even though there are some differences in the parties, they both subscribe to the death of the influence of the natural born American, and their Constitution, and the embrace of a global society. So they over ran us with third world immigrants, taxed us to death, and the push is really on right now to finish us off. We will be flooded with them over the next five years, absolutely flooded, ignorant, mallible masses with no idea of what's up.
I offer as evidence the fact that we have had the worst terrorist attack anywhere on earth in anyone's history, we lost more people in NY and DC than at Pearl Harbor, and yet, not one, not one congressman, not one politican, including our President has made one move to stop the flood, on the contrary, they are opening the flood gates.
That's what the 245(i) scam was all about, giving amnesty to illegal relatives of legal residents. It's a cycle that perpetuates itself, apparently forever because neither party seems interested in stopping it.
For the Republicans, that means suicide.
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