I’d love to know where Cheney stands on this issue.
He’s been very quiet on it. A good soldier, he’ll toe the Administration line on it if he must, but his silence on it seems to convey a message in itself.
Very true. Maybe Cheney needs to take W on a hunting trip, and give him a good talking to.
Cheney? I have to beleive he’s on board with amnesty. His domestic policy advisor is one of the biggest open border proponents around and helped defeat prop. 187. And his son in law was general council for Homeland security and did nothing to solve any of the problems.
Cesar Conda, former domestic policy advisor for Cheney and Grover Norquist, Bushs main immigration man, whose brother David Norquist is Chief Financial Officer at the Department of Homeland Security. His wife also works for Bush at USAID, a palestinian Muslim.
Cesar Conda earned the wraith of the Ludwig von Mises Institute: Joining in this richly-funded campaign of hysteria and smear was the entire official libertarian (or Left-libertarian) movement, including virtually every free-market and libertarian think tank except the Mises Institute. ... For their part, the neo-conservative and official libertarian think tanks joined the elite condemnation of Prop. 187. Working closely with Stephen Moore of the Cato Institute, Cesar Conda of the Alexis de Tocqueville Institution circulated a statement against the measure that was signed by individuals at the Heritage Foundation, the American Enterprise Institute, the Manhattan Institute, the Reason Foundation, and even the Competitive Enterprise Institute. [13]
(http://www.mises.org/econsense/postscript.asp#p407) _____________________
In a letter to the WSJ signed with LINDA CHAVEZ, Grover Norquist, Tamar Jacoby, Newt Gingrich, Cesar Conda and others he promoted Bush/Kennedy Amnesty as the only workable approach.
snip] The Wall Street Journal February 6, 2004 Welcome to America
President Bush has proposed a new legal path to work in the U.S. through a temporary worker program that will match willing workers with willing employers. We applaud the president and believe his approach holds great promise to reduce illegal immigration and establish a humane, orderly, and economically sensible approach to migration that will aid homeland security and free up border-security assets to focus on genuine threats. The president has shown courage by calling on Congress to place reality over rhetoric and recognize that those already working here outside the law are unlikely to leave. Congress can fulfill its role by establishing sufficient increases in legal immigration and paths to permanent residence to enable more workers to stay, assimilate, and become part of America.
Immigrants are crucial to our competitiveness and future labor and economic growth, as well as our military strength. Our countrys welcoming attitude to immigrants will permit the U.S. to grow and prosper, as the populations of many other nations stagnate and decline.
Co-authored by Stuart Anderson, Jeff Bell, Linda Chavez, Larry Cirignano, Cesar V. Conda, Francis Fukuyama, Richard Gilder, Newt Gingrich, Ed Goeas, Tamar Jacoby, Jack Kemp, Steve Moore, Grover Norquist, Richard W. Rahn and Malcolm Wallop
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1836137/posts?page=65#65
If Cheney is against this illegal alien amnesty, I’d prefer his resignation, not his silence.
“Id love to know where Cheney stands on this issue.”
Me too. Because if this passes a Bush impeachment is almost inevitable. We knew what a President Cheney would do to the War on Terror - no more pussyfooting around. But immigration?
I have to believe that Cheney is against this... He’s so strong on national security. He must be grinding his teeth.