October 23, 2007
Hillary A Shoo-in? A Democrat Says: “Don’t Be Too
Sure"—Because Of Immigration
By
Donald A. Collins
If you read the papers and listen to the news, you
know the Republican Party is in the tank. The Iraq
War is ongoing, billions are being spent that
Americans know should be going to domestic projects
and Mr. Bush keeps adding to his disaster résumé
with every decision he makes.
"What
a great chance for America to elect
its first women President! “
I hear many Democratic colleagues saying, as Hillary
develops a lead that seems decisive.
Not so fast. As Hillary
courts the La Razas and
other ethnic lobbies who demand more and more for
immigrants, the anger among Americans from both parties
mounts.
As
today’s Washington Post story entitled
"GOP Finds Hot Button in Illegal Immigration"
[By Jonathan Weisman, October 23, 2007] reports, in a
special election in Massachusetts in a heavily
Democratic Congressional District, the well-known
Democrat Niki Tsongas, widow of former Senator Paul
Tsongas, won this past Tuesday—but only by a slim
margin.
Why? Well, "The [Republican challenger's]
campaign needed a way to go beyond [his excellently
credentialed] biography, to persuade Northern
Massachusetts to vote Republican. They found it in
illegal immigration."
A
month earlier he had been running way behind. But
"this issue has real implications for the country. It
captures all the American people's anger and frustration
not only with immigration, but with the economy,"
Rep. Rahm Emmanuel (Ill.), chairman of the House
Democratic Caucus and an architect of the
Democratic congressional victories of 2006, is
quoted as saying. "It's self-evident. This is a big
problem."
Furthermore, the Post’s Weisman reports:
“Republicans, sensing a major vulnerability, have been
hammering Democrats, forcing Congress to face the
question of illegal immigration on every bill they can
find, from agriculture spending and housing assistance
to the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)."
Democrats are really between a rock and a hard place on
this issue. Hispanic votes are
a major part of their base. But they should be
looking hard at the nasty incursions which this massive
intake of illegal and legal aliens has been making on
tax supported services and the constant attempts to
expand those giveaways to illegal aliens which are
being sponsored by
big employers, the
Catholic Bishops and the
Hispanic lobbyists.
The economy for the middle and working class American
citizens ain't that rosy. And the
fat cat salaries of the Fortune 500 CEOs are making
many from both parties
upset. Since Congress and the President got elected
on the big money from those in the
catbird seat, many Americans feel disenfranchised.
Especially when many
local cities and towns try immigration reform and
get
clobbered with law suits by the pro-open
borders ACLU, while the Feds do nothing about
protecting our
ports and
borders. And then there are the
constant stories about Border Patrol Agents
Ramos and Compean serving big jail time for shooting
an alien drug smuggler.
Further, perhaps rather than repeating low voter
turnout, many Americans, who see their country being
given away to aliens, to China, to Iraq War profiteers,
and other special interest hand-outs (hey, do you know
about "earmarks"?
Betcha do!) by our Federal government, will turn out in
greater numbers.
So
a candidate that is strong on real immigration
reform–not "comprehensive" immigration reform,
now well understood to be another massive amnesty–may
very well appeal to enough voters in 2008 to overcome
the deep hole that Bush has dug for his Party.
Remember Hillary has baggage too and her final pitch on
her stance on this possible swing vote issue will be
important. However, voters should understand that if she
is elected, she will not accomplish real immigration
reform because she simply can't change the swing weight
of her party's direction—just as Bush can't off his
religious conservative base.
The Post’s Weisman reports,
"A
new national poll for National Public Radio, conducted
by the Democratic polling firm Greenberg Quinlan Rosner,
and the Republican firm Public Opinion Strategies, found
that voters are more likely to side with Democrats than
Republicans on war, taxes and spending, the economy,
health care and health insurance for children, often by
wide margins. On immigration, the Republicans hold a 49
to 44 percent lead".
But this same pollster thinks that immigration margin
may be deceptive! Some Democrats are saying it is
impractical to expel 12 million people. But, Folks, that
is not where the American people are on this issue. They
don't want another big amnesty, they want real action.
As
the Post quotes Chairman Emanuel, (D-Ill),
"For the American people, and therefore all of us, it's
emerged as the third rail of American politics. And
anyone who doesn't realize that isn't with the American
people."
Hillary may think she can win against a weakened
Republican Party, saddled with a lame-duck cowboy
President, by ignoring the need to offer real
immigration reform and advocating more of the same old
bipartisan bring'em-in policies.
But if she faces a credible Republican standard bearer
who offers real achievable plans for immigration reform,
she could be a surprise loser.
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.