
Tancredo wins surprise immigration vote
Date: Saturday, June 16 @ 10:32:04 EDT Topic: congress senate illegal Immigration Laws
Tancredo wins surprise immigration vote
By Chris Barge, Rocky Mountain News June 15, 2007
Washington, D.C. – The U.S. House of Representatives this morning voted to withhold federal emergency services funding for "sanctuary cities" that protect illegal immigrants.
Anti-immmigration champion Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-Colo., sponsored the measure, which he says would apply to cities such as Denver and Boulder. He was elated by its passage, which stunned critics and supporters alike.
The Littleton Republican's amendment to the Department of Homeland Security appropriations bill appears to have no language specifically defining a sanctuary city. Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper has long disputed giving the city that label.
"The issue has come to fruition," Tancredo said by cell phone after the vote. "The people of the country really have spoken. It's a really good indicator of just how much closer to the people the House is than the Senate is."
The House passed the amendment, 234 to 189, with 50 Democrats voting in favor.
Topics: Illegal Immigration, Illegal Immigrants, Illegal Aliens,
Terrorists, Border Security, Department of Homeland Security, Washington, D.C., Republican, Rep. Tom Tancredo, Sanctuary City,
Tancredo and his staffers hooted and cheered from his office across the street from the Capitol immediately after the vote.
Tancredo has introduced similar amendments at least seven other times since 2004, but each has failed — often by wide margins.
The Homeland Security appropriations bill faces a vote tonight in the
House, then later in the Senate. It must also be signed by the
President before it becomes law.
A year ago, Tancredo and other immigration foes unveiled billboards in
Denver, including one with a mock declaration: "Welcome to SANCTUARY
CITY . . . Relax, you made it! Brought to you by Executive Order 116."
The billboard was referring to a 1998 order issued by former Denver
Mayor Wellington Webb that outlines the city's anti-discrimination
stance regarding immigrants.
"There are no ordinances, executive orders or regulations that
establish a 'sanctuary policy' in Denver," the mayor's spokesperson,
Lindy Eichenbaum-Lent, said at the time.
"Denver's policies comply with federal law, and Denver law enforcement
officers cooperate with federal officials on immigration matters.
Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials have said Denver
is not a sanctuary city, so merely erecting a misleading billboard
doesn't make it true."
A call for comment from Hickenlooper had not been returned immediately after the House vote.
The amendment comes as the Senate is poised to take up debate again
next week on an immigration reform plan that some opponents criticize
as giving amnesty to illegal immigrants.
President Bush, who supports the Senate's reform plan, sweetened the
deal this week by agreeing to include $4.4 billion for border security.
The Senate had put the reform bill on ice because it lacked enough
support to bring to a vote.
Tancredo said he thinks his amendment is an indicator that the House would crush the reform plan if it passes in the Senate.
"If I were (Speaker of the House) Nancy Pelosi, I'd be asking if she
could pass a vote on amnesty on the House side," Tancredo said. "If she
lost 50 Democrats on this one, and she says she needs 70 Republicans to
pass the immigration plan, this is an interesting indicator of things
coming down the pike, and that the times, they are a-changing."
|
|