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  1. #1
    Senior Member LegalUSCitizen's Avatar
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    ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION IS ON THE MINDS OF VOTERS

    Immigration's Impact Is On the Minds Of Va. Voters

    By Robert Barnes
    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Monday, September 12, 2005; Page B01

    It has become a standard refrain in Republican Jerry W. Kilgore's stump speech for governor, tucked in among the pledges for better pay for better teachers and the promises not to raise taxes:

    Virginia officials "should not be spending more of your hard-earned tax dollars to encourage illegal immigration.

    Graphic
    Most Virginians Oppose Centers

    Graphic
    Declining favor nationwide for chance for legal status


    Kilgore Can't Count On a Lift from Bush
    A day after President Bush beat U.S. Sen. John F. Kerry in Virginia by 9 percentage points last year, the president's campaign manager in the state called the results a demoralizing blow to Democratic gubernatorial candidate Timothy M. Kain

    Kilgore's eagerness to talk about the issue is being watched closely not just by his campaign opponents but also by political analysts and immigration experts nationwide. Campaign experts say the issue can be a risky one for a politician, and immigration experts are interested in how a clearly federal responsibility is working its way into gubernatorial campaigns and dividing state legislatures and city councils.

    Illegal immigration "is an issue of growing concern and even anxiety at the grass roots," said Roberto Suro, director of the Pew Hispanic Center. "It's one of those issues where politicians of both parties are trying to catch up with the public."

    In Virginia, a new Washington Post poll shows, 33 percent of registered voters think "the growing number of immigrants" has been bad for their communities, compared with 21 percent who say it has been good. In Northern Virginia, where most of the state's immigrants reside, residents split almost equally on whether immigration has been good or bad for their communities.

    The poll also shows that, statewide, voters agree with Kilgore's view that officials should not use public money to build centers where day laborers can gather to look for work, an issue that has sharply divided the Fairfax County town of Herndon.

    By a ratio of 56 to 42 percent, voters say taxpayers should not fund the centers. And when respondents were asked how they would feel if some of those who used the centers to look for work were in the country illegally, opposition grew even stronger.

    "There's definitely a huge gap between the elite and public perceptions on immigration," said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, which supports stricter immigration controls.

    But the battles emerging across the country often result in contradictory results and in many cases do not follow the "red-blue" pattern of partisan politics that has marked recent nationwide campaigns.

    Democratic governors Janet Napolitano of Arizona and Bill Richardson of New Mexico, both of whom Kilgore mentions when talking about his interest in the issue, say smuggling and illegal immigration in their border states have created a state of emergency. And states and cities across the country are changing laws regarding education, social and medical benefits, driver's licenses and day laborers.

    What is striking is that there is little agreement on whether the best approach is what Krikorian calls "accommodation or enforcement."

    For example, Arizona voters, over Napolitano's opposition, approved a proposition last year enacting some of the nation's toughest laws regarding illegal immigrants. But in neighboring New Mexico, legislators granted in-state tuition to illegal immigrants, the ninth state to do so, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. The state joined an unlikely electoral coalition of California, Illinois, Kansas, New York, Oklahoma, Texas, Utah and Washington state in offering the benefit.

    Immigration's Impact Is On the Minds Of Va. Voters
    Across the nation, "it's definitely not a red-blue issue," Suro said.

    Things are different in Virginia, which will have its gubernatorial election Nov. 8. Although Democratic Gov. Mark R. Warner this year signed a bill that bars illegal immigrants from receiving certain public benefits, including Medicaid and public assistance, the movers on the issue in the commonwealth are Republican, led by Kilgore.


    Graphic
    Most Virginians Oppose Centers


    Graphic
    Declining favor nationwide for chance for legal status


    Kilgore Can't Count On a Lift from Bush
    A day after President Bush beat U.S. Sen. John F. Kerry in Virginia by 9 percentage points last year, the president's campaign manager in the state called the results a demoralizing blow to Democratic gubernatorial candidate Timothy M. Kaine.


    Hunting for a New Cash Crop
    The patches of international vegetables are the latest example of how immigrants moving into the Washington region are reshaping the economy.



    The former attorney general's opponents have denounced him for getting involved in the Herndon fight. Town leaders this summer found themselves caught in a months-long debate about that issue, with residents fiercely divided over whether such a center rewarded illegal immigrants or simply recognized the reality that the workers are integral to the region's booming economy and that it would be better gathering them in one place than on street corners or in front of convenience stores.

    State Sen. H. Russell Potts Jr. (R-Winchester), who is running for governor as an independent, called Kilgore's actions "the worst form of pandering." Lt. Gov. Timothy M. Kaine, the Democratic candidate, said Kilgore is trying to find a wedge issue in what was an attempt by local officials to solve a difficult problem. "I think that's kind of slimy," he said Thursday.

    Despite polls that show high voter unhappiness with illegal immigration, political experts say candidates must be careful, for fear of overplaying the issue or risking being called racist. Kirkorian, who said he would like to see the issue debated more, said Americans want "sober and intelligent" discussion on the issue and will be turned off by a "red face behind a lectern."

    Kilgore can point to being consistent for years in his approach to the issue, championing legislation that would deny illegal immigrants in-state tuition, driver's licenses and government identification cards and any employment assistance. On his Web site, a release from the campaign says Virginia is facing "an illegal immigration crisis," though he doesn't go that far in campaign speeches. And he blames illegal immigration for another problem that the Post poll shows is very much in voters' minds: the rise of gangs such as Mara Salvatrucha.

    Kilgore calls day-laborer centers -- there are such facilities in Arlington, Silver Spring, Takoma Park and plans for two more in Wheaton and Gaithersburg -- "magnets for illegal immigration." But the real attraction is jobs generated by the region's hot economy.

    The Pew Hispanic Center estimated that Virginia and Maryland each was home to more than 700,000 foreign-born people, of whom 200,000 to 250,000 people in each population are undocumented.

    In what demographers call "new settlement areas," communities sometimes are overwhelmed by the rapid change and the demands placed on schools, law enforcement and social services. But residents also get to know the newcomers in a different way, distinguishing between "immigration" as a concept and the "immigrants" that they meet.

    The Post poll shows that Northern Virginia voters, who live in the most immigrant-populated area of the state, differ with the rest of the state on the impact of immigration and on the day-laborer centers. By a slight majority, Northern Virginia voters favor using public money to build the centers.

    Mark J. Rozell, a public policy professor at George Mason University who is closely following the Virginia race, said he isn't sure how the issue will play out.

    "I think it was risky, but on the other hand, I don't see how Kilgore could not bring it up," Rozell said, because the issue has become so important to Kilgore's conservative base.

    "The situation in Herndon shows that you don't have to be a border state for the issue to reverberate."

    Polling director Richard Morin and staff researcher Bobbye Pratt contributed to this report.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/co ... 461_2.html
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #2
    Senior Member LegalUSCitizen's Avatar
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    Illegal immigration should be on the minds of voters. It better start to be on the minds of politicians.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

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