The Washington Times
www.washingtontimes.com


By Cal Thomas
Published June 6, 2007

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. . . and frustration
Former senator and probable Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson brought Virginia Republicans to their feet last Saturday night in Richmond when he said the public no longer believes in politicians who promise to secure the U.S. border as part of a bipartisan immigration bill.
"You've got to secure the border first, before you do anything," said Mr. Thompson. "The members [of Congress] say it's right here in this bill: the border. The response is, 'We don't care what's on a piece of paper -- secure the border.' The piece of paper doesn't secure the border."
Mr. Thompson claimed the bill now debated in the Senate is "the same deal" offered in the 1986 amnesty: legalization of aliens in exchange for border security. He said the public won't be fooled again.
When Mr. Thompson speaks of distrusting Washington politicians, he is including Republicans and President Bush, who in recent weeks -- in company with members of his administration -- have taken to labeling opponents of the bill xenophobes and nativists, even suggesting some are racists.
Among many reasons to distrust the immigration bill is the failure of the administration to convince the public it would hold accountable those who break a new law, when they have been lax enforcing existing laws. If illegals refuse, or claim they can't pay the proposed $5,000 fine to obtain a legal visa, or if they abscond, as many have, will the government roll out the buses and jets and deport them, along with family members whether born here or allowed to immigrate as part of the "chain migration" that brought so many in the past?
In a recent interview with the Wall Street Journal's Kimberley Strassel, the president again asserted there will be economic benefits to the country from permitting millions more foreigners to live among us. Miss Strassel writes, "Studies have shown that immigrants add some $10 billion annually in net economic output." That is misleading. A new report by the Heritage Foundation says the American taxpayer pays for tens of billions of dollars in services and other benefits to households of low-skill immigrants, many of them illegal.
Analysts Robert Rector and Christine Kim write that on average, each of these 4.5 million households receives nearly $3 in taxpayer-funded services for every $1 it pays in taxes: While low-skill immigrants paid an average $10,573 in taxes in fiscal 2004, they received nearly threefold as much -- $30,160 per household -- in government benefits and services for a "fiscal deficit" of $19,587.
That deficit might be tolerable were it for a short and fixed term and if illegal immigrants were required to learn English, receive a good education and improve their lot beyond manual labor. But the chances of illegal immigrants doing that are equal to politicians telling the truth about the immigration bill.
The Pew Hispanic Center reports one-third of all foreign-born persons in the United States are Mexican and half of those are illegal. At least half of adult illegals lack a high-school degree, compared to 25 percent of legal immigrants.
In the Journal interview, the president reveals what's really at the heart of the debate: politics. "If people think that a party is against somebody or some group of people, you'll pay a political price for it." He then likened those opposed to the immigration bill to people who once opposed civil rights for blacks.
Miss Strassel links civil rights opponents to the Republican Party, but the majority party during most of those years was the Democratic Party and the majority of those opposed to civil rights legislation were Southern Democrats.
If the president thinks this is about politics, he should open the borders and let anyone who will do so come. Why tell any immigrant "no" if they, or their native land, might be offended?
Democrats clearly believe illegals are potential recruits into their party. If Republicans fall for this crass appeal to import new voters, they will deservedly suffer electoral deportation from what remains of their power. Already, contributions to the GOP by grass-roots donors have declined 40 percent, according to The Washington Times. The immigration bill is cited as the main reason for reduced donations. This trend will continue if the Washington politicians keep trying to force a bill down the throats of those who don't want it.
Whose country is this? Does it belong to illegal immigrants and politicians, or to the citizens of the United States of America?

Cal Thomas is a nationally syndicated columnist.


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