February 09, 2008
A Democrat's Utter Dismay at His Party's Likely Nominees for President
By
Donald A. Collins
Super Tuesday is history! What will it
prove? Well, it now seems certain that the head of
each major party ticket will be a US Senator,
neither of whom is in favor of real patriotic
immigration reform. With some 50 million legal and
illegal aliens and their
offspring added to
our population since
1965, our government has all the while miserably
failed to enforce the law against illegal
immigration and allowed
runaway legal immigration far beyond any
reasonable labor needs.
While the issue of immigration now
appears as a
top voter concern in all the polls, the majority of
American citizens of both parties keep asking the same
key questions about immigration that FAIR's President,
Dan Stein asked in a recent interview for a
documentary film on immigration ,
"Why do US Senators of
both political parties spend more time and energy
defending the interests of illegal aliens at the expense
of US citizens and legal immigrants? Why do successive
US presidents of both parties refuse to uphold and
enforce the law, continue to allow massive illegal
immigration and repeatedly push for amnesties for
increasing millions of foreigners who come to America in
defiance of our laws? In light of the known threats
posed by international terrorists, why do American
politicians continue thwart any effective measures to
control our borders and ports, and continue to pander to
the interests of millions of illegal aliens and the
organizations that seek to represent them? To whom are
US Senators and Congress persons responsible and
accountable - to the American people or to
ethnic lobbies and
multinational business interests?"
We all know about McCain and his
sponsorship of the infamous and soundly defeated
McCain-Kennedy Comprehensive Immigration Reform bill. So
don't vote for him if you care about protecting your
country from this immigrant invasion. McCain says he
will secure our borders and our ports, but most
reasonable observers, including this Democrat, would
strongly question his willingness to follow through.
And then there's
Obama and Clinton, a dynamic duo, each
vying to be more open borders than the other.
One would assume that Obama's
African American heritage might cause him to be less
inclined to see the illegal importation of Hispanic
slave labor. Not necessarily. According to the San
Francisco Chronicle, quoting Federico Peña, a former
Clinton administration Cabinet member and Denver mayor
now supporting Obama:
“’Barack Obama has not
backed down’ on driver's licenses for undocumented
people, said Federico Peña, ‘I think when the Latino
community hears Barack's position on such an important
and controversial issue, they'll understand that his
heart and his intellect is with Latino community.’ "
Clinton
backed off her
support of Spitzer's plan last fall to give drivers'
licenses to illegal aliens in NY State. When asked
directly about the issue now, her California campaign
spokesman said Clinton "believes the solution is to
pass comprehensive immigration reform." [Obama
takes big risk on driver's license issue, By
Carolyn Lochhead, January 28, 2008]
Clinton won in California, New Jersey,
New York and Massachusetts. But clearly the battle is
still on and if the litmus test for winning the
nomination gets to be "drivers' licenses for illegal
aliens", which is of course where the now-openly
totalitarian groups like La Raza and others would like
it to be, then I betcha Hillary is their girl.
(I say now-openly totalitarian like La
Raza after listening to its President Janet Murguia on
Monday,
February 4th CNN news program call Lou Dobbs a
racist and any other group which favors tighter
immigration laws "racists”. She said La
Raza would be meeting with media presidents to "hold
the networks accountable” and to remove
people like
Chris Simcox and others from being on any of their
news programs. See the show
here. )
Obviously, Obama's intention was to make
distinctions between himself and Clinton, who are
otherwise indistinguishable positions on immigration.
Both have adopted the standard Democratic approach of
favoring tougher enforcement along with “earned
legalization”—i.e amnesty
Earlier Democratic pollsters Stan
Greenberg and James Carville issued a direct warning on
the driver's license issue in their guide to Democrats
on dealing with this potential wedge issue. Turns out
two-thirds of those surveyed oppose such licenses and
dismiss the safety argument.
But Latinos are hopeful that Obama will
stick on this issue and influence Clinton as the
campaign goes on. According to the San Francisco
Chronicle,
“The Illinois senator is
differentiating himself in three key areas: driver's
licenses, a promise to take up immigration reform his
first year in office, and his background as the son of
an immigrant (his
father was
Kenyan) and a
community organizer in Chicago.”
The best wedge issue the Republicans had
in this campaign was true immigration reform. But McCain
has blown that. This may give the Democratic nominee a
free pass on dealing with the issue.
Bush has been giving the Democrats a
free pass too. In this campaign, it will be the voters'
job to keep their country from being taken over by
making lots of noise about the issue.
The absence of a solid immigration voice
is deplorable. The oncoming recession (or is it a
depression?) may cool the onrush of illegal and legal
aliens. But that is no long term solution. We citizens,
the
true reform majority, will have to fight this out at
every level.
As states
take action along with cities like
Hazleton, it may be that the voters will become
single-issue proponents and hit Congress harder and
faster than these arrogant elitists now imagine.
When the winner in November faces the
challenges of war, deficit, and recession, he or she may
be singing a different tune.
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.