“Scott Walker advocating path to citizenship? Not so fast
During the Politico interview, Walker complained about a broken immigration system, and said the U.S. should reduce the barriers to legal entry for people who want to come here and live the American Dream, saying, we should be welcoming those people with open arms.
Then Walker was asked if he supports a bipartisan approach to give illegal immigrants now living here a kind of provisional status not necessarily citizenship — to remain in the country.
I dont know if thats exactly (the answer) but theres got to be some way, said Walker. For people waiting to come in our country legally, weve got make sure that they get in first, that they get their status first, because theyve been following the rules, and playing by the rules. After that, if there is a way to set up a process so that you enable people to come in and have a legal pathway to do that, thats something weve got to embrace. Whether or not its that specific bill or not, I think theres some nuances to that.
While Walker talked about a legal pathway, he said nothing about citizenship. (Some Republicans support a pathway to legal status for undocumented immigrants but not citizenship.)
Walker also argued that there was too much focus on resolving the status of illegal immigrants and not enough on fixing the legal immigration process to allow more people into the U.S., especially to meet the demand for high-skilled and other workers.You can read a transcription of the relevant parts of the interview here.
Because of the way his comments were reported, Walker was asked again about the citizenship issue in an interview two days later with the Journal Sentinel.
For the undocumented 12 million that are already here, have you said that youd support finding a way for them to become citizens? the governor was asked.
I havent gone into the details of that. What I said in that (Politico) interview and Ive said in others is weve got to balance that, and find a way to fix — my focus is less on a way of dealing with those here — that doesnt mean its not a part of it —but my focus has been on, first and foremost, weve got to fix what I think is a broken immigration system just for those that are seeking legal passage.
Walker was asked: But you havent taken a position on whether the people that are already here should have a conditional pathway to citizenship?
His answer:
No. Again I think long term thats going to be a part of it but I think there are too many people here in Washington who are leapfrogging over everything else and trying to get to that right away. We fundamentally dont have a system ... to legitimately deal with people who want to come — in fact, I think you would greatly reduce if not outright eliminate the number of people who come in illegally if we had an effective, time-effective particularly, system of dealing with legal immigration.
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But he says that’s part of the long-term solution, only that he hasn’t gone into the details of it.
Also, he has said he wants everyone who wants to come here, whether they are from Mexico or Germany or wherever, to be able to come here legally. Additionally, as he has said here, if they come and behave themselves, there should be a way for them to gain citizenship as well.
That means, he’s for allowing essentially everyone on the planet to move to the US and if they stay out of legal trouble then become citizens—just as he wants the illegals already here to be able to do.