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  1. #1
    Senior Member concernedmother's Avatar
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    GOP Leaders Say Immigration Reform Not Likely in 2006

    http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,200363,00.html

    GOP Congressional Leaders Say Broad Immigration Reform Bill Unlikely This Year
    Tuesday, June 20, 2006

    STORIES
    •Pennsylvania Mayor Pushes Measure to Crack Down on Illegal Immigrants•Senators Hear About Immigration Law Enforcement Failures
    WASHINGTON — In a defeat for President Bush, Republican congressional leaders said Tuesday that broad immigration legislation is all but doomed for the year, a victim of election-year concerns in the House and conservatives' implacable opposition to citizenship for millions of illegal immigrants.

    "Our number one priority is to secure the border, and right now I haven't heard a lot of pressure to have a path to citizenship," said Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., announcing plans for an unusual series of hearings around the nation to begin in August on Senate-passed immigration legislation.

    "I think it is easy to say the first priority of the House is to secure the borders," added Rep. Roy Blunt, the GOP whip.


    In deference to the president, neither Hastert nor any other Republican official in either house said publicly that the president's ambitious plan — including a guest worker program as well as an opportunity for citizenship for many illegal immigrants — was dead for the year.

    But several Republicans in both houses, speaking on condition of anonymity, were less guarded.

    "There will be no path to citizenship," said one lawmaker who attended a strategy session in Hastert's office.

    Some officials added that Republicans have begun discussing a pre-election strategy for seizing the political high ground on an issue that so far has served to highlight divisions within the party. Among the possibilities, these officials said, are holding votes in the House or Senate this fall on additional measures to secure the borders, or on legislation that would prevent illegal immigrants from receiving Social Security payments or other government benefits.

    "The discussion is how to put the Democrats in a box without attacking the president," said one aide, speaking on condition of anonymity.

    Additionally, GOP aides said Rep. Tom Reynolds, chairman of the House campaign committee, has recently been using polling data to persuade fellow members of the leadership that the public would respond poorly to some provisions in the Senate-passed bill.

    White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said after Hastert's announcement of hearings, "The president is undeterred. We are committed and we have been working very hard with members (of Congress) to see if we can reach consensus on an issue the American people have said they want action on."

    In the Senate, Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., told reporters he welcomed hearings. "As much examination of the House bill and Senate bill as possible is good," he said.

    Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., a principal author of the Senate-passed measure, offered to testify at House hearings. Sen. Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania, chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said, "I'm hopeful" of a compromise before the elections.

    Hastert announced no schedule for the completion of hearings. He and other members of the leadership sidestepped numerous times when asked whether a House-Senate compromise along the lines of what Bush has sought could come to a vote by year's end. "I am not putting any timetable on this thing, but I think we need to get this thing done right," the speaker told reporters.

    The Republican-controlled House passed border security legislation last year, largely along party lines. By contrast, the Senate approved a bipartisan bill calling for tougher border enforcement; penalties against employers who hire illegal immigrants, a new guest worker program and a shot at citizenship for most of the estimated 12 million immigrants in the country illegally.

    The measure won the support of only 23 of the Senate's 55 Republicans. Frist, a likely presidential contender for 2008, is under pressure from conservatives not to agree to a compromise bill they oppose. Democrats, on the other hand, are insisting on assurances that any final bill will remain bipartisan.

    Hastert told reporters he had conveyed his views on immigration privately to Bush in recent days, and other officials said opinions among House Republicans hardened when Republican Rep. Brian Bilbray won a special election this month in the San Diego area. Bilbray campaigned for tougher immigration measures than Bush favors, and equated the president's approach to amnesty.

    Several Republican officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Hastert and the president had expressed differing views at one meeting about the importance of immigration in Bilbray's victory. These officials said Hastert assigned it greater weight than the president. The Republican National Committee ran a 72-hour program in the campaign's final days that many Republicans credit with maximizing the vote for the winner.

    Additionally, the RNC conducted a postelection poll of the San Diego-area district that suggests voters take a dim view of citizenship for illegal immigrants.

    The poll found that when people were asked if they prefer a comprehensive bill to one that emphasizes border security and imposing criminal penalties on individuals already in the country illegally, the comprehensive approach was favored, 45-32. But when asked if they favor a comprehensive approach or a security-first bill that "under no circumstances" allows for citizenship, 43 percent said they prefer focusing on the border, and 33 percent picked overall reform.
    <div>"True patriotism hates injustice in its own land more than anywhere else."
    - Clarence Darrow</div>

  2. #2
    Senior Member Dixie's Avatar
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    White House spokeswoman Dana Perino said after Hastert's announcement of hearings, "The president is undeterred. We are committed and we have been working very hard with members (of Congress) to see if we can reach consensus on an issue the American people have said they want action on."
    Ha! Fighting a loosing battle there Bush. Congress will come to us for re-election. That's our Ace in the hole.

    Dixie
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  3. #3
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    http://www.gopusa.com/news/2006/june...ion_bill.shtml

    Border Security Advocate Predicts Final Immigration Bill Will Take Time

    By Chad Groening
    AgapePress
    June 21, 2006

    (AgapePress) -- The head of a grassroots citizens group says he believes it could take most of the summer for the U.S. Senate-House Conference Committee to come up with a final version of the immigration reform bill. And when that final bill is hammered out, he expects it will closely resemble what the House passed last year.

    Colin Hanna is with the group WeNeedaFence.com, which works to promote border security, immigration reform, and enforcement of U.S. immigration laws. He says he believes the House and Senate immigration bills are just too far apart for anyone to expect a quick resolution, and he anticipates a long debate over finalizing the legislation.

    "It'll probably take most of the summer, and there will be a whole lot of so-called 'to-ing and fro-ing' during that," Hanna observes. Meanwhile, he says, "Each of the houses will be going back to their respective constituents and talking about various options that are being offered to narrow the gap between those two bills."
    But with the mid-term elections looming in the fall and the vast majority of Americans clamoring for better enforcement of existing immigration laws, the citizens' advocate believes the final immigration reform bill will be one that stresses enforcement over amnesty. And what it will not contain, Hanna contends, are "ridiculous" Senate provisions such as requiring the U.S. to consult with Mexico before building a fence on the American side of the border.

    Hanna believes GOP senators will support a final bill similar to the House version, even though they voted previously for Senate legislation that pushed a guest worker amnesty plan and was light on enforcement.

    "Given the fact that there are Republican majorities in both houses," the WeNeedaFence.com spokesman notes, "isn't it more likely that the Republican majorities from the Senate are looking for ways that they can come up with a bill that they can support?" That, according to his reckoning, is the more reasonable outcome.

    "I think you're going to have a Conference Committee report that is closer to the House bill and that winds up getting majority Republican support," Hannah says. He is optimistic that the finalized version of the legislation will provide many of the border security provisions for which his group and other reform advocates have been calling.
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  4. #4
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    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  5. #5
    Senior Member Reciprocity's Avatar
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    Looks like Amnesty is a dieing cause
    “In questions of power…let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution.” –Thomas Jefferson

  6. #6
    Senior Member JuniusJnr's Avatar
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    yeah, right! let's fiddle around a little longer, holding the border hostage and letting 20 million illegal aliens live out of our pockets.

    I just don't trust this at all. I think it is another stall tactic.
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