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  1. #1
    Senior Member moosetracks's Avatar
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    Mexico is changing attitude towards issues of immigration

    Mexico is changing attitude toward issues of migration

    Fox says generating new jobs will keep people from leaving

    By S. Lynne Walker and Sandra Dibble
    COPLEY NEWS SERVICE / STAFF WRITER

    June 2, 2006



    EARNIE GRAFTON / Union-Tribune
    Mexican President Vicente Fox said in an interview this week in Ensenada that many of his own childhood friends who grew up in Guanajuato state have migrated to the United States.

    ENSENADA – The hardening of the U.S. line on illegal immigration is forcing Mexico to look inward at a tacit public policy that encourages unemployed Mexicans to sneak across the border for work and send billions of dollars home to their families.

    Jobs are the new mantra on the Mexican side of the border, as the country talks seriously for the first time about sharing the responsibility for nearly 100 years of immigration.

    With roughly one in 10 Mexicans now living in the United States, President Vicente Fox acknowledges that his country must do more to keep people from looking north for employment.

    “We want to make it clear to the United States that we have obligations in Mexico. The obligation is to generate jobs. The obligation is to ensure opportunities for our people,” Fox said.

    He said Mexico's economy is growing at a rate of 5.5 percent, the fastest since he took office in 2000. Inflation is at the lowest level in Mexico's history, and population growth has slowed to 1 percent. Along the northern border, Fox said the maquiladora industry needs 100,000 additional workers.

    “We are working hard so that our people have jobs, so they earn good salaries,” Fox said during an interview Wednesday night in this port city. “We are going to do our work on the Mexican side.”

    Fox's statements signal a change in Mexico's attitude about the immigration problem, political analysts said.

    “In Mexico, the immigration issue has always been seen as a U.S. issue: 'You open up and legalize and that solves the problem. It doesn't involve the Mexican government,' ” said Luis Rubio, who heads a Mexico City think tank.

    But with the Fox government pushing the United States for immigration reform, people on both sides of the border are asking what measures Mexico is prepared to take to curb the unending stream of migrants.



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    Under pressure from the United States, “Mexico will have to restrict access in the south and control the flows in the north,” Rubio said. “That will dramatically change the domestic debate in Mexico.”
    Already, Mexican public opinion is shifting.

    Fox's government is being pummeled with questions on issues ranging from Mexico's treatment of Central American guest workers to its opposition to U.S. National Guard troops and the building of more fencing along the U.S.-Mexico border.

    “Why put 6,000 National Guard troops on the border? Why not 50,000? If the United States is serious about closing the border, then close it with walls, with technology. It is the best scenario for the migrants, it is the best scenario for Mexico, it is the best scenario for the United States,” said Primitivo Rodríguez, an immigration expert who worked for 10 years as a migrant activist in the United States.

    “The worst scenario is to half close the border because it will mean deaths like never before, abuse and corruption.”

    Few support such drastic measures.

    But “there is consensus that it is time for Mexico to take responsibility,” said Jorge Santibáñez, president of the Colegio de la Frontera Norte in Tijuana. “What is happening in the United States will force us, for better or worse, to revise our migratory policy.”

    Fox has made immigration reform a priority of his presidency, which will end in December. “The Fox administration pulled the topic from under the rug and put it on the table,” Santibáñez said. But Fox failed to “build the necessary consensus so that Mexico can really negotiate with the United States.”

    There are strong indications the U.S. House of Representatives, which favors stronger border enforcement, will not agree with the provisions of a Senate bill that includes a guest worker program and potential citizenship for millions of undocumented workers – a bill that also declares English the national language of the United States and calls for the construction of double-and triple-layered fencing along 370 miles of border.

    Fox supports the Senate bill, which he calls “a great step forward.”

    Under that legislation, Fox said, Mexican workers “are going to enter through a door that gives them fair treatment, orderly, where there are rules and their rights are respected.”

    But Santibáñez and others have criticized Fox for acting as if the measure has been enacted, and they have claimed that he is motivated by a desire in the final days before Mexico's July 2 presidential election to show his administration's success.

    In Mexico, people increasingly are speaking out about the consequences Mexican families face when they are separated by economic need. Since Fox took office after his election in 2000, more than 2 million Mexicans have crossed the U.S. border in search of jobs, according to his own government's figures.

    Thousands of villages across rural Mexico are populated with only women, children and the elderly. Women do the work of men, tilling the earth with oxen and plows. Children cry for fathers they no longer remember. Young women long for boyfriends, but there are no eligible young men in town.

    Fox said many of his own childhood friends, who grew up near his family's ranch in Guanajuato state, migrated to the United States. “They are in Chicago, San Antonio, New York, these friends of mine,” he said.

    The president said he is “proud of those Mexicans,” who sent home more than $20 billion last year, according to the Bank of Mexico. Their contribution to the economy is second only to petroleum.

    But for many Mexicans, the price is too high.

    “You cannot manifest any joy for something where 500,000 Mexicans must leave their country every year,” Santibáñez said. “For Mexico, this is a tragedy.”

    Fox said the day is rapidly approaching when Mexicans will not have to go to the United States for jobs. Population growth is slowing, causing a shift in Mexico's demographics from a young population to an adult population.

    By 2015, Mexico “will be using 100 percent of its work force . . . of its youth, to move our economy and to take care of our retirees,” he said. “We are going to have the ability in this country to offer opportunities to our own people here in Mexico.”

    That's good news for people who risk their lives to search for work across the border, he said.

    “Our people don't want to go up there,” Fox said. “They like tacos more than hot dogs. They like a torta better than a hamburger. They like to dance with mariachis better than they like dancing at a discotheque. Our people want to be in Mexico.”

    http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib ... n2fox.html



    WEll, well well.....wonder what turned Fox around? Could it be all those emails we sent directly to him and to his tourists industry?
    Do not vote for Party this year, vote for America and American workers!

  2. #2
    Senior Member crazybird's Avatar
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    So....how soon can they go back to tacos and dancing anyway? Not fast enough for me.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  3. #3
    Senior Member moosetracks's Avatar
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    How long for the trip from the Northern States...I say 2-3 days!
    Do not vote for Party this year, vote for America and American workers!

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    Prolegal7's Avatar
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    The American people have been seeing through the lies and have been making a difference. I even contacted the prime minister of Canada about the problems here and discouraged his government from allowing illegal Mexicans to go there....added the fact that even his own citizens are not safe in Mexico considering the slaying of a Canadian couple in Cancun. Also it was interesting to see an illegal Mexican alien at the store the other day....all business was conducted in English...hmmm...maybe they realize that it is our national language....and we are starting to do the clamp down on their presence here.

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    Mexico is changing attitude toward issues of migration
    And I have some nice swampland to sell......

    You never know which side of his forked tongue that Foxie is speaking out of.
    http://www.alipac.us Enforce immigration laws!

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    Senior Member lsmith1338's Avatar
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    I agree dataman, Fox speaks out of both sides of his mouth and Mexico is going to do nothing before he leaves office in December. The next president however is going to have to deal with this issue of trying to make Mexico better so that everybody there does not want to leave.
    Freedom isn't free... Don't forget the men who died and gave that right to all of us....
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  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by lsmith1338
    I agree dataman, Fox speaks out of both sides of his mouth and Mexico is going to do nothing before he leaves office in December. The next president however is going to have to deal with this issue of trying to make Mexico better so that everybody there does not want to leave.
    Just like our President elect in 2008, will have to deal with all the mess Bush has left behind

  8. #8

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    When Fox was elected in 2000, he promised sweeping changes to eliminate corruption in the Mexican Government. As soon as he was elected, he appointed dozens of corrupt officials from the previous administration and promptly left Mexico for....60 days I think, on a world tour. I assume it was to let things blow over. A real trustworthy guy! Like everyone in Washington D.C., I wouldn't believe a word they say, even if their tounges came notarized!
    "Let my name stand among those who are willing to bear ridicule and reproach for the truth's sake." -- Louisa May Alcott

  9. #9
    Prolegal7's Avatar
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    It may be true that Fox like some of our own government officials are corrupt, but the bottom line is that citizens need to deal with these issues and absolutely nothing is going to happen unless people speak out....I have told some of my members of congress that I will sue them if an illegal alien does harm to me or my family in any way and if that illegal alien was given amnesty by virtue of their vote in congress.

  10. #10
    Senior Member butterbean's Avatar
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    “We want to make it clear to the United States that we have obligations in Mexico. The obligation is to generate jobs. The obligation is to ensure opportunities for our people,” Fox said.
    [b]IS HE JOKING! After sending over 15-20 million of his worst pickings over the border, he wants to generate jobs right there in Mexico? He says "We want to make it clear to the United States that we have obligations in Mexico" Why doesnt he just offer to take them all back to Mexico so he CAN offer them jobs? Then we can resolve this whole entire mess.
    RIP Butterbean! We miss you and hope you are well in heaven.-- Your ALIPAC friends

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