Posted on 11/05/2015 6:17:23 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
With Speaker Paul D. Ryanâs comments about immigration Sunday, the top two Republicans in Congress have now declared dead the prospects of an overhaul before the 2016 elections.
In the aftermath of 2012, when Latinos made up 10 percent of the electorate and President Barack Obama was re-elected resoundingly, Republican lawmakers and strategists predicted the GOPâs White House ambitions were directly tied to the passage of comprehensive immigration legislation. Many of those voices havenât changed their tune.
Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., one of the four âgang of eightâ Republicans who successfully navigated an immigration overhaul through the Senate in 2013, told CQ Roll Call it will be âextremely difficultâ for a Republican to win the White House without action on immigration.
âI wouldnât predict, but I think that when you have a majority of a Hispanic population right now identifying themselves as in favor of some kind of path to citizenship and itâs important to them, I think it makes it more difficult,â McCain said Tuesday.
Thatâs a softened take from June 2014, when he said it wouldnât matter whom the party nominated for president if the GOP blocked immigration legislation. That came just a month after Chamber of Commerce President Thomas Donohue suggested Republicans shouldnât even put up a candidate if they failed to pass an overhaul.
Two other Republicans from the gang of eight, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and Marco Rubio of Florida, have discussed immigration policy on the presidential campaign trail. But Rubio backed off his advocacy for the 2013 bill after conservatives tagged a provision on granting a pathway to citizenship for undocumented immigrants as âamnesty.â
The presidential race isnât the only one where this issue could play a significant role. Republicans, who have a vulnerable majority going into next year, are defending Rubioâs open seat in Florida and their top two pick-up opportunities are in Nevada and Colorado â all states with sizable Hispanic populations.
Ryanâs immigration comments Sunday mirrored what Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said right before the August recess â both pinned their decision not to pursue comprehensive legislation on Obamaâs executive actions, some of which are being challenged in court.
Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., the fourth Republican in the Senate gang of eight, agreed that the prospects of a wide-ranging bill are dead for now, though he noted âsomething on the marginsâ is possible. While Flake believes an immigration overhaul isnât a prerequisite to getting a Republican in the White House, he said a successful GOP candidate will need a plan.
âI think that any Republican running for president has to have a realistic approach,â Flake told CQ Roll Call. âThatâs not to say that immigration reform has to be accomplished in this Congress â I wish it would be, Iâm still pushing for it. But whoeverâs running for president as a Republican has to have a rational position.â
Of the GOP presidential candidates, Flake said business tycoon Donald Trump âdoes notâ have a rational position, but those who do include former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, Rubio and Graham.
On Sunday, Ryan said pieces such as border enforcement or interior security are possible this Congress, but comprehensive legislation wonât happen âwith a president whose proven himself untrustworthy on this issue.â That position supports a pledge Ryan offered to House conservatives last month as he sought a consensus for his speaker bid.
Following his comments on national network TV, conservatives said they scored a major concession from the Wisconsin Republican, who has championed efforts to grant legal status to undocumented immigrants. Members of the House Freedom Caucus said they donât think he would support that even as a stand-alone bill, separate from a comprehensive overhaul.
McCain agreed that Obamaâs actions were âvery, very damagingâ to the process, especially since Obama didnât make a strong push for an immigration overhaul when Democrats âhad overwhelming majorities in 2009 and 2010.â
Senate Minority Whip Richard J. Durbin, a fellow gang of eight member, panned using Obama as a scapegoat, noting that the bipartisan Senate bill died in the Republican-controlled House prior to any executive action.
âFor some people in politics, any excuse will do â this one is the least credible,â the Illinois Democrat said. âThe president took the action he did because the House failed to act. And now, Speaker Ryan is using that as an excuse to continue to fail to act.â
Then why is Trump polling over 25% amongst Hispanics?
McCain is just another Post Modernist Statist. The scary part is that McCain is not smart enough to understand Post Modernism. All he knows is that Post Modernism rejects traditional set moral beliefs and labels anyone who still believes in God given rights as stupid and provincial.
Taking election advice from McCain is like taking dancing lessons from a paraplegic...
I have no doubt.
I do suspicion that the 150 billion in frozen Iranian assets were confiscated and spent as frozen doesn’t really mean frozen and Iran is a terrorist state, their assets would only go towards terror.
I also suspect that US taxpayer money was reappropriated by the Obama admin and Kerry for Iran.
I further suspect that we will see more of that kind of thing soon.
All with willing gleeful compliance by most of the majority party.
McCain needs cheap labor for his beer baron wife factory.
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