Politics > Politics-USA > Tancredo is pulling the immigration debate to the right-and away from Bush
| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"JP" |
| Date: |
26 Mar 2006 09:03:21 AM |
| Object: |
Tancredo is pulling the immigration debate to the right-and away from Bush |
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12017855/site/newsweek/
MSNBC.com
A Border War
Tom Tancredo is pulling the immigration debate to the right-and away from
Bush.
By Holly Bailey
Newsweek
April 3, 2006 issue - The lights were on, the cameras were rolling, but the
special guest star was nowhere to be found. Last Friday afternoon, 55 men
and women from 30 countries sat in a Denver conference room, clutching small
American flags as they waited to be sworn in as U.S. citizens. The 12:15
starting time had come and gone, and some people were getting impatient.
"For heaven's sake," one woman said, sighing. "What is the holdup?" A few
minutes later, they had the answer. Tom Tancredo, the Republican
congressman, was coming to welcome the new citizens. He was hard to miss
when he breezed in, 25 minutes late, dressed in a dark suit and an
American-flag necktie. Even so, few in the room recognized him until one man
whispered, "He's the guy who sits on the border chasing illegals."
Tancredo may not be a household name yet, but he's doing everything he can
to change that. As the House and Senate debate the nation's immigration and
border-security laws, the four-term Coloradan has positioned himself as the
loudest, angriest voice against the estimated 11 million illegal aliens now
living in the United States. They are "a scourge that threatens the very
future of our nation," he says. He laments "the cult of multiculturalism,"
and worries about America's becoming a "Tower of Babel." If Republican
presidential candidates don't put the problem atop the agenda in 2008, he
says he'll run himself, just to force the front runners to talk about it.
Not that he thinks he'd win the White House. He declares himself "too fat,
too short and too bald" to be president. If the Republicans lose the
election because he's too tough on the issue, he says, "So be it."
Not so long ago, Tancredo was regarded as little more than a noisy pest on
Capitol Hill. His colleagues shook their heads at his tireless demands for
crackdowns on American employers who hire illegals and his idea for a
700-mile-long fence along the Mexican border. But in recent months, some of
those same Republicans have come to realize that, while Tancredo may be a
crank, he is a crank with a large and passionate following. Anti-immigration
sentiment has always simmered, and it flares up about once a decade-the last
time it hit this level was 1996, when California Gov. Pete Wilson made it
the centerpiece of his failed presidential campaign. Tancredo was one of the
first politicians to tap into the latest surge of anger. In states with
large numbers of undocumented workers, voters complain that poor illegals
are overwhelming public schools, clogging hospital emergency rooms and
bankrupting welfare budgets. And they worry that inadequate border security
makes it easy for would-be terrorists to sneak into the country. Tancredo's
colleagues are listening. When he arrived in Washington, he started the
Immigration Reform Caucus. The group attracted just 16 members. Today, there
are 91.
Tancredo's anti-immigration campaign is also brazenly, almost gleefully,
taking aim at George W. Bush and Karl Rove. The president had once hoped the
immigration debate would center on his proposed guest-worker program, which
would allow illegals-who fill millions of unskilled, low-wage jobs-to stay
in the country for a set period of time. This was Bush the pragmatist, the
former border-state governor who wanted to acknowledge the importance of
immigrant labor to construction, fruit farming and other chunks of the U.S.
economy. "He doesn't think it's morally right that a group that has been
critical to the strength of the economy is operating in the shadows," says a
senior Bush aide who, following policy, spoke anonymously. Meanwhile, Rove
pushed the pure political benefits of the plan: immigrant-friendly policies
would help the party reach out to the fast-growing Latino vote.
Instead, the immigration debate has split the GOP, with many Republicans in
the House and Senate, worried about alienating voters, openly opposing the
president. In December, the House tossed aside the worker program and passed
a bill that features tougher security at the Mexican border-including
Tancredo's cherished fence-and crackdowns on illegals who are already here.
"You can't ignore him," says a GOP leadership aide who wouldn't be named
because he wanted to keep his job. "The administration doesn't want to hear
this, but a lot of Americans think he's right."
In the Senate, Republicans, led by John McCain and Arlen Specter, have been
working to come up with a compromise that would include border security, a
guest-worker program and a way for illegal immigrants to "earn" citizenship.
But Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a presidential contender with one eye
on the anti-immigration vote-and the other one on outflanking McCain-has
threatened to put forward his own get-tough plan this week if the senators
fail to come through.
It's not just Republicans elbowing for attention. Last week Sen. Hillary
Clinton whacked the GOP with the Bible, implying anti-immigration proposals
were not only hardhearted, but un-Christian. The bill, she said, "would
literally criminalize the Good Samaritan and probably even Jesus himself."
Bush, forced to step up his own security rhetoric in response to the feud,
is still hoping for a compromise. At an immigration meeting at the White
House last week, the president said that "the debate must be done in a way
that doesn't pit one group of people against another." But Florida Sen. Mel
Martinez, a former Bush cabinet member who sides with the president on the
issue, fears that's exactly what is happening. "Republicans have made
significant gains [among Latinos]," he says, "and we're risking all of that
by allowing ourselves to be positioned as anti-immigrant ... We are at great
peril."
Tancredo believes there's greater danger in doing nothing. All he wants, he
says, is to see the law enforced. "I don't like it when people call me a
racist or xenophobe," he says. "In my heart, I know that I'm not." A
60-year-old grandson of an Italian immigrant, he grew up in a working-class
family. He ran for Congress on a whim in 1998, and won by pushing
immigration reform. He says he became passionate about the issue back in the
1970s, when he was a Denver junior-high-school teacher. At the time,
Colorado had just passed a bilingual-education bill. He says students with
Latino-sounding names were put into Spanish-language classes, even if they
spoke English only. "It was ridiculous, and a total waste of time and
money."
He's remained unapologetic about his views. In 2002, The Denver Post ran a
human-interest story about a high-school honors student who couldn't get
college financial aid because he was in the United States illegally.
Tancredo tried to have the boy and his family deported. (He was
unsuccessful.)
Back at the immigration ceremony, Tancredo thanked the new citizens for
coming to the United States "the right way," and urged them to "cast aside
loyalties to your old countries and walk with us." One lucky person walked
away with more than a citizenship certificate. When he heard that a young
woman from Mexico had waited more than a year for her paperwork to clear,
Tancredo approached her. He apologized that he was out of the lapel pins he
usually hands out. Instead, he gave her a more personal gift: his
American-flag necktie. "Gracias," she said.
With Daren Briscoe and Richard Wolffe
© 2006 MSNBC.com
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12017855/site/newsweek/
.
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| User: "John Wood" |
|
| Title: Re: Tancredo is pulling the immigration debate to the right-and awayfrom Bush |
26 Mar 2006 02:58:43 PM |
|
|
Jeez, I've never seen such an obviously petty, vindictive attack piece
put into the mainstream. The man is risking his career by going up
against the powerful Latino lobby, and their exponentially growing voter
base. What a radical concept he is fighting for - actually enforcing
laws that are on the books.
JP wrote:
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12017855/site/newsweek/
MSNBC.com
A Border War
Tom Tancredo is pulling the immigration debate to the right-and away from
Bush.
By Holly Bailey
Newsweek
April 3, 2006 issue - The lights were on, the cameras were rolling, but the
special guest star was nowhere to be found. Last Friday afternoon, 55 men
and women from 30 countries sat in a Denver conference room, clutching
small
American flags as they waited to be sworn in as U.S. citizens. The 12:15
starting time had come and gone, and some people were getting impatient.
"For heaven's sake," one woman said, sighing. "What is the holdup?" A few
minutes later, they had the answer. Tom Tancredo, the Republican
congressman, was coming to welcome the new citizens. He was hard to miss
when he breezed in, 25 minutes late, dressed in a dark suit and an
American-flag necktie. Even so, few in the room recognized him until one
man
whispered, "He's the guy who sits on the border chasing illegals."
Tancredo may not be a household name yet, but he's doing everything he can
to change that. As the House and Senate debate the nation's immigration and
border-security laws, the four-term Coloradan has positioned himself as the
loudest, angriest voice against the estimated 11 million illegal aliens now
living in the United States. They are "a scourge that threatens the very
future of our nation," he says. He laments "the cult of multiculturalism,"
and worries about America's becoming a "Tower of Babel." If Republican
presidential candidates don't put the problem atop the agenda in 2008, he
says he'll run himself, just to force the front runners to talk about it.
Not that he thinks he'd win the White House. He declares himself "too fat,
too short and too bald" to be president. If the Republicans lose the
election because he's too tough on the issue, he says, "So be it."
Not so long ago, Tancredo was regarded as little more than a noisy pest on
Capitol Hill. His colleagues shook their heads at his tireless demands for
crackdowns on American employers who hire illegals and his idea for a
700-mile-long fence along the Mexican border. But in recent months, some of
those same Republicans have come to realize that, while Tancredo may be a
crank, he is a crank with a large and passionate following.
Anti-immigration
sentiment has always simmered, and it flares up about once a decade-the
last
time it hit this level was 1996, when California Gov. Pete Wilson made it
the centerpiece of his failed presidential campaign. Tancredo was one of
the
first politicians to tap into the latest surge of anger. In states with
large numbers of undocumented workers, voters complain that poor illegals
are overwhelming public schools, clogging hospital emergency rooms and
bankrupting welfare budgets. And they worry that inadequate border security
makes it easy for would-be terrorists to sneak into the country. Tancredo's
colleagues are listening. When he arrived in Washington, he started the
Immigration Reform Caucus. The group attracted just 16 members. Today,
there
are 91.
Tancredo's anti-immigration campaign is also brazenly, almost gleefully,
taking aim at George W. Bush and Karl Rove. The president had once hoped
the
immigration debate would center on his proposed guest-worker program, which
would allow illegals-who fill millions of unskilled, low-wage jobs-to stay
in the country for a set period of time. This was Bush the pragmatist, the
former border-state governor who wanted to acknowledge the importance of
immigrant labor to construction, fruit farming and other chunks of the U.S.
economy. "He doesn't think it's morally right that a group that has been
critical to the strength of the economy is operating in the shadows,"
says a
senior Bush aide who, following policy, spoke anonymously. Meanwhile, Rove
pushed the pure political benefits of the plan: immigrant-friendly policies
would help the party reach out to the fast-growing Latino vote.
Instead, the immigration debate has split the GOP, with many Republicans in
the House and Senate, worried about alienating voters, openly opposing the
president. In December, the House tossed aside the worker program and
passed
a bill that features tougher security at the Mexican border-including
Tancredo's cherished fence-and crackdowns on illegals who are already here.
"You can't ignore him," says a GOP leadership aide who wouldn't be named
because he wanted to keep his job. "The administration doesn't want to hear
this, but a lot of Americans think he's right."
In the Senate, Republicans, led by John McCain and Arlen Specter, have been
working to come up with a compromise that would include border security, a
guest-worker program and a way for illegal immigrants to "earn"
citizenship.
But Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, a presidential contender with one
eye
on the anti-immigration vote-and the other one on outflanking McCain-has
threatened to put forward his own get-tough plan this week if the senators
fail to come through.
It's not just Republicans elbowing for attention. Last week Sen. Hillary
Clinton whacked the GOP with the Bible, implying anti-immigration proposals
were not only hardhearted, but un-Christian. The bill, she said, "would
literally criminalize the Good Samaritan and probably even Jesus himself."
Bush, forced to step up his own security rhetoric in response to the feud,
is still hoping for a compromise. At an immigration meeting at the White
House last week, the president said that "the debate must be done in a way
that doesn't pit one group of people against another." But Florida Sen. Mel
Martinez, a former Bush cabinet member who sides with the president on the
issue, fears that's exactly what is happening. "Republicans have made
significant gains [among Latinos]," he says, "and we're risking all of that
by allowing ourselves to be positioned as anti-immigrant ... We are at
great
peril."
Tancredo believes there's greater danger in doing nothing. All he wants, he
says, is to see the law enforced. "I don't like it when people call me a
racist or xenophobe," he says. "In my heart, I know that I'm not." A
60-year-old grandson of an Italian immigrant, he grew up in a working-class
family. He ran for Congress on a whim in 1998, and won by pushing
immigration reform. He says he became passionate about the issue back in
the
1970s, when he was a Denver junior-high-school teacher. At the time,
Colorado had just passed a bilingual-education bill. He says students with
Latino-sounding names were put into Spanish-language classes, even if they
spoke English only. "It was ridiculous, and a total waste of time and
money."
He's remained unapologetic about his views. In 2002, The Denver Post ran a
human-interest story about a high-school honors student who couldn't get
college financial aid because he was in the United States illegally.
Tancredo tried to have the boy and his family deported. (He was
unsuccessful.)
Back at the immigration ceremony, Tancredo thanked the new citizens for
coming to the United States "the right way," and urged them to "cast aside
loyalties to your old countries and walk with us." One lucky person walked
away with more than a citizenship certificate. When he heard that a young
woman from Mexico had waited more than a year for her paperwork to clear,
Tancredo approached her. He apologized that he was out of the lapel pins he
usually hands out. Instead, he gave her a more personal gift: his
American-flag necktie. "Gracias," she said.
With Daren Briscoe and Richard Wolffe
© 2006 MSNBC.com
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12017855/site/newsweek/
.
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