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The Immigration Conflagration Is Not Yet Extinguished
by Newt Gingrich
Posted: 06/11/2007
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When
Washington quit work last week, it looked as though the disastrous
Bush-McCain-Kennedy immigration bill was dead. As I write this,
however, it is now clear that the Bush Administration is determined
to force it through with raw power, despite the fact that a large
and increasingly vocal majority of Americans oppose it. Every recent
survey has indicated that the American people think it is better
to drop this bill and start over. But the power brokers and special
in terests in Washington feel otherwise. The White House press statement
Sunday trumpeted: "This Bill Is Alive and Well" The President is
apparently going to go to lunch with the Republican senators on
Tuesday.
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Here are a few talking
points you should share with your senator TODAY -- before they lunch with
the President.
The
Proposed Bill Is Based on a Fantasy and Could Never Be Effectively Implemented:
It is outrageous when the federal government is so incompetent it has
to suspend passport requirements for Mexico and Canada while at the same
time suggesting it will be able to process a "Z" visa for 12 million-plus
illegal immigrants in one day. Tell your senator that only a Washington
power structure totally out of touch with reality could propose that.
The Attempt to Blackmail
the American People by Threatening to Refuse to Enforce the Law Without
a New Bill Is Disgraceful:
A number of powerful figures in the Bush Administration and in the Senate
have been saying that if we do not agree to pass this destructive bill,
they will never enforce the law. Tell your senator that this is an extraordinary
effort to blackmail the American people by having officials state that
they will fail to perform their sworn duty, and we won't stand for it.
Americans Do Not Change
Our Values to Fit Government Failures:
When Secretary
of Homeland Security Michael Chertoff said that we had to "bow to the
reality" of millions of people being here illegally, he illustrated the
difference between Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan as President.
Carter kept trying
to convince us to accept malaise as the best we could do and to lower
our expectations. Reagan told us we had every right to dream great dreams
because we were Americans. Tell your senator that Secretary Chertoff needs
to get off the Carter failure team and join the Reagan su ccess team.
That goes for everyone else in Washington who is trying to tell us we
have no choice except to "bow to" illegality.
Why Should
Any American Believe That This Government Will Keep Its Word and Do Better
This Time? We
now hear from the President that we have failed to control the border
and failed to enforce the law on employers, and therefore, we need a new
law to replace the law we have been failing to enforce. But we have been
here before. The Simpson-Mazzoli immigration law passed 20 years ago promised
the same things.
And this raises another
question: Who has been running the government for the last six years?
Why do we think anything will change and that the law will now suddenly
be enforced? Over the last six years, the three recently arrested New
Jersey terrorists who had been here illegally for 23 years had a total
of 75 charges by the local police, and yet not once was our immigration
enforcement infrastructure able to ide ntify that they were here illegally.
And now we are told that with the new comprehensive immigration bill,
we will start to enforce the law against those have come here illegally
after Jan. 1, 2007.
But ask this simple
question: Under the proposed law, will local, state and federal officials
really try to distinguish between those who came to the U.S. illegally
prior to Jan. 1, 2007 (eligible under the proposed law for amnesty), and
those who have arrived here illegally -- or those who overstay their visas
-- after Jan. 1, 2007 (not eligible for the proposed amnesty)? The case
of the 75 prior interactions with police of the Fort Dix terrorists demonstrates
that we currently are incapable of identifying people here illegally,
even if their names are in the judicial system. If 12 to 20 million are
amnestied, who is seriously going to try and distinguish between the old
illegal and the new illegal?
Another sign that
enforcement promises may be as empty today as they turned out to be 20
years ago is that Arizona Democratic Gov. Janet Napolitano just reported
that the administration's budget cuts National Guard work at the border,
even though the program is hopelessly behind in meeting its goals.
Tell your
senator that
this is a good time to remember the Reagan rule of "trust but verify."
Show us the controlled border, show us the law enforced on American employers,
show us the shift back to English as the official language of government
and show us the end of sanctuary cities that refuse to identify those
here illegally (by the way the Senate bill actually codifies the right
of cities and counties to give sanctuary to illegal terrorists), then
we will begin to think about a new bill.
This Is a
Fight for America's Future: Your
senator needs to understand that this is the key fight over America's
future and returning to a law-abiding, effectively enforced, serious government
worthy of the American people. L et them know they can be with the vast
majority of Americans and kill the bill or they can side with the special
interests and try to ram through this extraordinarily destructive bill.
Either way, tell them you will remember them and how they vote.
--NEWT GINGRICH

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