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December 03, 2005
How Vicente Outfoxed Dubya
By
Joe Guzzardi
In my column last week, I bid an
early and not-too-fond farewell to Mexican president
Vicente Fox whose
six-year term mercifully expires next year.
I summarized—as much as such a
thing is possible in a mere 1,000 words—Fox’s hypocrisy,
duplicity and overall
oiliness.
But in fairness to Fox (and we at
VDARE.COM are nothing if not fair), I must confess
that one aspect of his administration has been nothing
less than brilliant.
Fox, through
his sheer persistence, has helped to elevate the
status of illegal aliens living in the US from criminals
to quasi-citizens.
While Fox has been a disaster for
Mexicans living in Mexico, he has been
the best thing since sliced bread for his nationals
residing north.
How Fox achieved a de facto
amnesty for Mexicans, even though he could never quite
pull it off de jure, is an important history
lesson for the immigration reform community.
And, since it was no accident, it
deserves a close look.
Here’s how I see it.
First, Fox needed an enabler. And
the perfect patsy for Fox turned out to be the former
governor from the
border state of Texas, George W. Bush.
Unlike California,
Texas has
a more tolerant attitude toward illegal immigration.
Bush, as we unhappily learned, was soft on the National
Question to begin with.
And Bush, who
had met with Fox during his term as governor,
provided Fox with an added bonus. Both are dedicated
believers in the number one elite political philosophy
of the 21st Century—globalism.
Fox sensed that he held a winning
trifecta of an exploding Hispanic population in the U.S,
growing influence of ethnic lobbying organizations like
the
Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund
and a paralyzing political correctness among the media
and Congress. He decided to make his case for
“migrant rights” early and often.
With the assistance of one of his
chief lieutenants, Jorge Hernandez, Fox created the
Presidential Office for Mexicans Abroad…e.g., the U.S.
As reported by
VDARE.COM’s Allan Wall, the newly-created agency,
under the direction of Hernandez, held regular meetings
with
American state and federal officials to promote the
Mexican agenda. Additionally,
Hernandez channeled complaints from Mexicans in the
U.S. directly to Fox.
Such
brazen intervention in U.S. domestic policy by a
foreign government is without precedent.
Fox was always totally confident
that he could have his way with Bush. In fact, in an
incident that marked an international low point in
foreign diplomacy, Fox delivered a
public sucker punch to Bush at their September 2001
joint White House press conference.
Insisted Fox in front of the
blindsided Bush:
“We
must and we can reach an agreement on migration before
the end of this very year which will allow us, before
the end of our respective terms, to make sure that there
are no Mexicans who have not entered this country
legally in the United States and that those Mexicans who
have come into the country do so with the
proper documents.”
History, in the form of
9/11, intervened. And the politics of
amnesty and guest worker programs have been bogged
down ever since.
Nevertheless, the groundwork laid
by Fox in the early months of his administration
resulted in astonishing strides for Mexicans —albeit
questionable from a legal perspective.
Credit Fox’s tenacity for cowing
federal and/or state governments to:
- Accept
widely, if not universally, the matricula consular card
as valid identification and
permit roving Mexican consular offices to distribute
these cards, in violation of State Department
restrictions on the activities of consular offices,
throughout the U.S.
- Ignore laws prohibiting
employers from hiring illegal aliens. Since Fox’s
non-stop campaign on behalf of illegal aliens
“rights” in the U.S., Mexican workers are hired
and work without fear of penalty. VDARE.COM’s Edwin
Rubenstein reported that since 2000 work place
arrests have plunged from
an already low 953 to a paltry 159.
- Push harder to allow illegal
aliens to pay
in-state university fees. This give-away is
often excused as “we cannot blame the children
for the sins of their parents” or the equally
noxious “it will cost us more in the long run if
we don’t educate them now.”
What makes Fox’s accomplishments so
much more stunning —and I have listed only a fraction of
them—is when they are weighed against how little the
U.S. has received in return.
Most obviously,
the Fox administration refused to support the U.S war in
Iraq.
And Fox will not address the long
simmering dispute over U.S. water rights that have been
usurped by Mexico.
According to a 2004
report by Susan Combs of the Texas Department of
Agriculture, regarding the 1944 U.S.-Mexico Water
Treaty
“President Fox has not
demonstrated a sincere willingness to work to resolve
the treaty issue.”
Combs hit the nail on the head. A totally insincere Fox works for one
thing only—to encourage the most desperate of his people
to illegally enter the U.S.
More than four and a half years ago, just after Bush had returned from
his first international trip (to Mexico, naturally), I
wrote a column for my hometown paper, the Lodi
News-Sentinel, asking the president
“Why All the Bowing, Scraping Toward Mexico?”
Based on his dismal performance this week in
Tucson and
El Paso, Bush still hasn’t come up with an answer.
But one thing is crystal clear:
Bush is willing to take down the Republican Party in
2006 before he will do right thing on immigration for
the American people.
Joe Guzzardi [email
him], an instructor in English at the Lodi
Adult School, has been writing a weekly newspaper column
since 1988. This column is exclusive to VDARE.COM. |