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  1. #1
    Senior Member moosetracks's Avatar
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    Pete Wilson: GOP timid on immigration

    June 13, 2006, 2:39AM
    Ex-California governor says GOP timid on immigration
    Wilson claims lawmakers fear being called racist


    By GEBE MARTINEZ
    Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle Washington Bureau

    WASHINGTON - The political godfather of California's initiatives against illegal immigrants in the 1990s said Monday that lawmakers who favor citizenship opportunities for such workers do so only because they are afraid of being labeled racists and nativists.

    "I think a great many Republicans have been intimidated, and I, frankly, am quite disappointed," former California Gov. Pete Wilson said during a speech at the Hudson Institute, a conservative think tank.

    Calling illegal immigration a threat to the nation's security and culture, the Republican also called for a fence to be built along the entire 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border before a path to citizenship is offered to the 12 million illegal immigrants in the country.

    Wilson refrained from directly criticizing President Bush, a longtime friend who has appointed him to foreign policy advisory boards. Bush supports a guest worker program and other facets of the Senate bill that includes an "earned citizenship"program.

    Instead, Wilson directed his criticism at the Senate.

    "I don't trust the Senate. They are looking for another stopgap. They are temporizing. They are not facing the issue because it's politically unpalatable," said Wilson, also a former senator.

    Wilson added that advocates of immigration controls believe their tax dollars are being used to support services for illegal immigrants.

    "That is not racist, it is not nativist," he said.

    As governor, Wilson pushed for Prop. 187, a 1994 initiative that denied state funding for health care and education services to illegal immigrants. The initiative passed but was overturned by a federal court; California has been a safe Democratic state in presidential elections since then.

    In the Los Angeles Times, the president's brother, Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, recently said Wilson fell prey to the idea of short-term political advantage when he backed the initiative.

    "I know he felt he was doing the right thing, but matters are worse now and the Republican Party is now the minority party in California," Bush said. (HELLO!! because they allowed too many Latino's in that vote Democratic!)

    Tamar Jacoby, a senior fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute, agreed that an enforcement-only bill without Bush's approach will hurt the party's outreach to Hispanics.

    "One of the most dangerous pitfalls facing the Republican Party this year is that the party does again on a national scale what it did in California under Pete Wilson," she said.

    The problem in California was the anti-Hispanic tone that enveloped the initiative campaign, Jacoby added. She recalled the television ad that contained night vision video of illegal border crossings and the narrator's deep voice warning: "They keep coming."

    Wilson discounted punditry that suggests Republicans were hurt by the Prop. 187 campaign. He also defended the ad.

    "Liberal critics of that ad may not have liked it then or now, but it is beyond dispute. They did keep coming," he said.

    gebe.martinez@chron.com
    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/nation/3963731.html
    Do not vote for Party this year, vote for America and American workers!

  2. #2
    Senior Member dman1200's Avatar
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    Tamar Jacoby, a senior fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute, agreed that an enforcement-only bill without Bush's approach will hurt the party's outreach to Hispanics.
    Oh you mean they might vote 20/80 against the Republicans instead of the usual 30/70. The neocons are living in a dream world.

    Calling illegal immigration a threat to the nation's security and culture, the Republican also called for a fence to be built along the entire 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border before a path to citizenship is offered to the 12 million illegal immigrants in the country.
    I don't know why we are even considering this at all. I keep hearing this lets secure our borders and enforce our laws before we offer amnesty to the illegals in this country. No, how about never. No amnesty, not now, not ever. You break the law, you get punished. If we stopped giving these illegals hope that they are going to get rewarded for their lawbreaking then they would stop. Enforcement now, enforcement forever.
    Please support our fight against illegal immigration by joining ALIPAC's email alerts here https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

  3. #3

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    Right on, dman...enforcement forever...

    MJ

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