November 25, 2006
A Democrat Says Republicans May Finally Be
Getting The Need For True Immigration Reform
By
Donald A. Collins
Hey, it is really finally
heartening to know that the part of the Republican Party
not represented by the lunatic fringe (i.e. the
Bush Administration) has
finally decided that their best interests do not lie
in bringing in another 20 to 60 million aliens, most of
them uneducated, into the US over the next 20 or so
years.
And, lo and behold, here
am I a Democrat, wishing them well.
Why? Fortunately, and at
long last, this impulse, possibly partly born of a
nasty comeuppance at the polls on November 7th,
seems to have surfaced, as some hardheaded Republicans,
any of whom survived the election debacle, looked at the
future and saw no reason to believe that this flood of
newcomers represented, as apparently the ex political
mastermind,
Karl Rove, does, that these
mostly Hispanic arrivals from Sunny
Mexico, will soon vote for any of the former policy
icons which once formed the backbone of their party’s
beliefs.
Remember those principles?
As I recall they used to include fiscal restraint,
measured military actions, downsizing government
bureaucracy, etc., But certainly not since Bush 43
ascended the throne in 2000 and blew the best chance
ever for long-term Republican hegemony by embracing the
evangelical right, driving out the social moderates and
the fiscal conservatives with inane blasts of arrogant
bluster seldom bettered in our history.
Evidence of this new
sensible attitude surfaced in an article in the November
14th Washington Times by Charles Hurt,
Republicans gird for fight over amnesty for illegals,
in which Arizona Republican Senator John Kyl was
reported to be ready to start “a Republican-led
filibuster would be on the table to block immigration
legislation supported by congressional Democrats and
President Bush that grants
citizenship rights to illegal aliens.”
Jeepers. Of course, “It
would be in order", the Arizona Republican told
radio host
Laura Ingraham November 13th. "My only question
is whether we've got the votes to do it."’
It’s a start toward
sanity. After Bush waited until after the election to
fire Rumsfeld, after lying about keeping Rummy for the
rest of his term, his stock in his own party has dropped
so low it likely couldn’t even get a listing on the OTC
penny sheets.
While Kyl worries over
getting enough votes to stop a filibuster override, I
suspect there are a number of my fellow-Democrats who
are also feeling the heat. For example, Congressman
Sherrod Brown, newly elected Senator from Ohio told
Lou Dobbs in a
November 14 interview that he sees the outflow of US
jobs as having a devastating effect on his home town of
Mansfield and
other small cities. This incoming Senator did
promise that the
borders and
ports be secured before considering what any sane
citizen would regard as gross malfeasance, the dreaded
concept of “comprehensive immigration reform” or
CIR as I call it, which means allowing the present 11 to
20 million illegal aliens here a pathway to citizenship
ala the Senate’s S2611.
However, simply stopping
the greased track for S2611 through the new House and
onto Bush’s waiting signature will represent progress.
Getting real security into
our broken immigration system, knowledgeable observers
recognize, is a complex process which cannot be done
quickly. Furthermore, any system which is to be
installed needs to be tested for reliability in truly
keeping our borders and ports secure will at best take
several years.
Thus, if true border and
port security measures would by a miracle be enacted in
this next Congress, Congress should not then rush to CIR
legislation.
So, folks, if any of these
long-time reform-minded Congress members or the
Johnny Come Lately Reformers who
see the voter groundswell want to do legislation on
amnesty immediately, that is the sure tip-off that they
want to pull replay of the failed 1986 and 1997
amnesties, rather than really fix the system.
Hurt’s Washington Times
article concludes by saying:
“All hope among tough
opponents of illegal immigration rests with the House,
where
Republicans maintained a hard line against any
legislation with even a hint of amnesty in it. Democrats
picked up some 30 seats in last week's elections, but
many of the new Democrats are from conservative
areas and are opposed to amnesty. The challenge would be
for Republican leaders to pick off enough of those
conservative Democrats to overcome broad support among
most in the caucus.”
A challenge indeed, and
one which voters need to watch closely.
Bad as the present open
border situation is, passing a version of
S2611 would be worse, and a very divisive way for
the new Congress to commence its sessions. True reform
would involve setting fair and enforceable
standards for entry, letting them be put in place
carefully over several years, then testing them in place
to take out the bugs, just like any competent business
would do in introducing a new product.
Then, if effective, this
system would allow us to know who was coming here and
allow us to keep track of them. Then, and only then,
should we consider amnesty for the illegal aliens now
here.
It is just common sense to
do it this way. But will the corporate owners of
Congress allow that? Depends on the voters, who must say
again and again to their elected officials, “Fix
the border and ports first or we won’t reelect you.”
Folks, your safety, your public services, the survival
of our cherished Rule of Law and the welfare of your
children and grandchildren depend on your enforcing this
course.
Donald A. Collins [email
him], is a freelance writer living in Washington DC and
a board member of FAIR, the Federation for American
Immigration Reform. His views are his own.