Tag Archives: DREAM Act

ROMNEY GOES 47% AGAIN!

Can we say…sore loser?

The NY Times

A week after losing the election to President Obama, Mitt Romney blamed his overwhelming electoral loss on what he said were big “gifts” that the president had bestowed on loyal Democratic constituencies, including young voters, African-Americans and Hispanics.

In a conference call on Wednesday afternoon with his national finance committee, Mr. Romney said that the president had followed the “old playbook” of wooing specific interest groups — “especially the African-American community, the Hispanic community and young people,” Mr. Romney explained — with targeted gifts and initiatives.

“In each case they were very generous in what they gave to those groups,” Mr. Romney said.

“With regards to the young people, for instance, a forgiveness of college loan interest, was a big gift,” he said. “Free contraceptives were very big with young college-aged women. And then, finally, Obamacare also made a difference for them, because as you know, anybody now 26 years of age and younger was now going to be part of their parents’ plan, and that was a big gift to young people. They turned out in large numbers, a larger share in this election even than in 2008.”

The president’s health care plan, he added, was also a useful tool in mobilizing African-American and Hispanic voters. Though Mr. Romney won the white vote with 59 percent, according to exit polls, minorities coalesced around the president in overwhelming numbers — 93 percent of blacks and 71 percent of Hispanics voted to re-elect Mr. Obama.

“You can imagine for somebody making $25,000 or $30,000 or $35,000 a year, being told you’re now going to get free health care, particularly if you don’t have it, getting free health care worth, what, $10,000 per family, in perpetuity, I mean, this is huge,” he said. “Likewise with Hispanic voters, free health care was a big plus. But in addition with regards to Hispanic voters, the amnesty for children of illegals, the so-called Dream Act kids, was a huge plus for that voting group.”

In the 20-minute call —which also featured an appearance by Neil Newhouse, the campaign’s pollster, Spencer Zwick, the national finance chairman, and Mason Fink, the finance director — Mr. Romney was by turns disappointed and pragmatic, expressing his frustration that he’d failed to defeat Mr. Obama on Election Day.

“I’m very sorry that we didn’t win,” he said on the call. “I know that you expected to win, we expected to win, we were disappointed with the result, we hadn’t anticipated it, and it was very close but close doesn’t count in this business.”

He continued: “And so now we’re looking and saying, ‘O.K., what can we do going forward?’ But frankly we’re still so troubled by the past, it’s hard to put together our plans from the future.”

He added half-jokingly that the close-knit group, which excelled in fund-raising but was ultimately unable to propel Mr. Romney into the Oval Office, could even help with “perhaps the selection of a future nominee — which, by the way, will not be me.”

Continue reading here…

 

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FACT CHECK: Republicans Continue To Do Nothing On Immigration Reform

Think Progress

Two years after Senate Republicans defeated the bipartisan DREAM Act by claiming that Congress must “secure the borders first,” Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) floated the idea ofintroducing a GOP alternative to DREAM. Rubio spent three months talking up the concept on cable news, but failed to offer a bill before President Obama announced an administrative directive to protect DREAM Act-eligible students from deportation.

In unveiling the initiative on Friday, Obama cited Congress’ inability to “fix our broken immigration system” as a reason for issuing the Department of Homeland Security directive. What he didn’t expect, however, is that Republicans would respond to the news by reinforcing his message and abandoning their reform efforts.

Republicans accused Obama of politicizing immigration and the party’s new spokesperson on the issue announced that he is closing shop on any efforts to tackle the immigration question. Rubio told the Wall Street Journal on Monday that he thinks Obama’s announcement “sets back our efforts to arrive at a balanced and responsible approach to this issue. It poisons the well. It leads to mistrust.”

But the truth is that Republicans had never seriously considered comprehensive immigration reform or any new solutions for helping young people stay in the country:

– House Judiciary Committee Chairman Refused To Hold DREAM Act Hearing: Even if Rubio had introduced a bill and if the Senate had approved it, a version of the DREAM Act would have immediately stalled in the House because of Rep. Lamar Smith (R-TX). The congressman chairs the Judiciary Committee and said he would not hold a hearing on the DREAM Act, which he called an “American nightmare.”

– Original Republican Sponsor Of DREAM Act Didn’t Vote For It In 2010: In 2003, Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT) sponsored the DREAM Act when it was first introduced. But when the Senate voted on a more conservative version of the bill in 2010, Hatch skipped the vote and dismissed it as a “cynical exercise in political charades” by Senate Democrats.

– Republican Claimed Democrats Used DREAM Act To Make Republicans ‘Look Bad’: After 41 mostly Republican senators stopped the DREAM Act from passing in 2010, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) claimed that Democrats had pushed the DREAM Act to hurt the GOP’s reputation among Latinos. The bill “passed without the ability to amend to try to make Republicans look bad with Hispanics,” he said. But Graham ignored the number of Republican senators from Latino-heavy states who previously supported the DREAM Act and voted against in 2010, and he failed to mention his own floor comments telling young undocumented immigrants who visited his office that they were “wasting their time.”

Republicans can claim that President Obama went around Congress to give protection to undocumented students, but it was the failure of congressional Republicans that forced him to act.

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Mitt Romney Promises To Have Immigration Reform ‘As Soon As I Get Elected’

Romney Hispanics

It appears Mr. Romney is quite confident on getting elected to the presidency.  I would suggest that if Romney is “elected” it will be because his sixteen or so millionaires bought him the position.

Meanwhile, Romney refuses to take a stand on the partial Dream Act that the President introduced via an executive order.

The Huffington Post

Mitt Romney was asked during his interview with Fox News on Monday to address once again President Barack Obama’s decision to stop deporting undocumented youth who have graduated from high school or served in the military. And for the second time in as many days, he stayed vague on whether or not he would rescind the order upon taking office.

“You know, we will see kind of what the calendar looks like at that point and I am not going to tell which items will come first, second, or third,” Romney said, according to transcripts released by Fox News. “What I can tell you is that those people who come here by virtue of their parents bringing them here, who came in illegally, that’s something I don’t want to football with as a political matter.”

As was the case with Romney’s CBS “Face the Nation” interview on Sunday, this was a largely evasive answer. And Fox News’ Carl Cameron, sensing that evasion, asked why the presumptive Republican nominee was fine saying he’d repeal Obamacare but unwilling to say as much about this quasi-Executive Order.

“Well, when we talk about illegal immigration I think I want to start by saying we need to secure the border, we’ve got to have an employment verification system, and then with regards to these children who came here brought in by their parents who came in here illegally, how we deal with them is something I think that deserves a long term solution and I don’t think we go jumping from one solution to the other,” Romney replied. “The president I think made a mistake by putting out there what he called a stop-gap measure; I think that’s not the right way to go. I’m not going to be looking for stop gap-measures; I’m going to be looking for a permanent or a long-term solution that’s something I will start on day one. Actually, as soon as I get elected hopefully, I will start working on this issue and hopefully be ready to go immediately.”

Romney may, indeed, be more interested in crafting broader immigration reform — though his promise to veto the DREAM Act suggests he’s far more interested in border enforcement than reform. He may find the idea of a stopgap measure bad politics and bad policy. But the idea that he will somehow craft legislation and get it ready to be implemented upon him taking office Jan. 20, is truly wishful thinking considering how hard it proved to pass during the latter Bush years and early Obama years.

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Frat-boy conservatism in the Rose Garden

Frat-boy conservatism in the Rose Garden

Joan Walsh of Salon pretty much nails it…

Salon

What a buffoon.

Daily Caller “reporter” Neil Munro heckled President Obama near the end of his remarks announcing an executive order stopping the deportation of young people whose parents brought them here illegally. Munro shouted, “Why do you favor foreigners over American workers?” while reportedly identifying himself as an immigrant. He describes himself as “born Irish, then became a Cold War bridegroom” on his Twitter profile. If only Obama had proposed a green-card dating service instead of his Dream Act workaround.

The visibly angry president smacked down Munro. “The next time I prefer you let me finish my statements before you ask a question,” Obama said. He then walked out of the Rose Garden without taking any queries from reporters.

I’m not one to revere the imperial presidency, but it’s unbelievable how wingnuts treat this man with such unprecedented and bullying disrespect: from Rep. Joe Wilson screaming “You lie” during Obama’s 2009 speech to a joint session of Congress, to Speaker John Boehner denying him his choice of dates for another congressional address (for the first time in history) last fall, to Donald Trump’s persistent, humiliating demands for the president to show him his papers (with no rebuke from ally Mitt Romney). And for right-wingers who insist Democrats are too quick to cry racism: Really, what else explains this constant, in-your-face (literally) contempt for a president?

Certainly they disrespected President Clinton, too, but never with such in-person abuse. Clinton was impeached after a political witch hunt and treated poorly even by the so-called liberal media, but he was never stalked into the Rose Garden or congressional chambers and heckled, as Obama has been.

Conservatism has always been associated with deference to authority, but lately it’s only for authority they respect. The Romney campaign has been glorying in this new form of frat-boy conservatism, first sending campaign supporters to heckle Obama adviser David Axelrod during a press conference, and yesterday sending its bus to circle and disrupt an Obama event, honking its horn. It reminds me of the famous “Brooks Brothers riots” in Miami during December 2000, when supporters of George W. Bush threatened to physically prevent county officials from recounting votes in that heavily Democratic stronghold. Of course, it also harks back to Romney himself in prep school, tackling a gay classmate and cutting off his long blond hair while he cried and asked for help.

It’s no accident that Munro works for bow-tied, sexually anxious bully Tucker Carlson, who famously (but not believably) boasted of beating up a gay man who made a pass at him in a men’s room, and admitted that when he hears Hillary Clinton speak, “I involuntarily cross my legs.” Jon Stewart called him a dick eight years ago, and he’s only gotten worse. This is your modern Republican Party, folks. It only gets worse.

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Romney’s Etch A Sketch Campaign Begins

EAn "Etch A Sketch " is for sale at FAO Schwarz in New York City on March 22, 2012. French electrician André Cassagnes created the toy in the late 1950s as the "L'Ecran Magique," and with the Ohio Art Company launched it in the US on July 12, 1960. The iconic toy has found its way to US presidential politics. Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney received backing from major Republican figures March 21 after a big win in Illinois, but an aide's gaffe reinforced qualms about his campaign. Asked on CNN whether the primary had pushed Romney too far to the right for general election voters, advisor Eric Fehrnstrom said "I think you hit a reset button for the fall campaign. Everything changes." "It's almost like an Etch A Sketch. You can kind of shake it up and restart all over again." AFP PHOTO / TIMOTHY A. CLARY (Photo credit should read TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP/Getty Images)veryone knew this would happen with the Etch-A-Sketch candidate.  It was just a matter of time.

New York Magazine

Two constituencies that President Obama is holding onto about as strongly now as he did four years ago are voters under 30 and Latinos. In what is probably not a coincidence, these two constituencies are the targets for the first two major Mitt Romney Etch A Sketch pivots of the general election. After having repeatedly denounced any need for the federal government to subsidize tuition costs during the primary, Romney has now endorsed Obama’s call for extending lower rates for federally-subsidized loans. Romney says he supports the measures “in part because of the extraordinarily poor conditions in the job market.” Apparently, he has been informed of the poor job market since wrapping up the nomination, when he was still advising graduates concerned about debt to acquire a high-paying job.

On immigration, Romney is making the turn a little more slowly, as you’d expect, given the sensitivities involved in holding together his base. Romney has deputized Marco Rubio to craft “his” own version of the Dream Act, a somewhat more restrictive version of the reform that Republicans in Congress killed and Romney opposed in the primary, when he positioned himself on the party’s right on immigration. Romney is “studying” Rubio’s bill.

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I WON’T TELL YOU WHICH DEPARTMENTS I’LL ELIMINATE

“Mittens” is at it again…

The Huffington Post

In a closed-door speech to donors at a private home in Florida on Sunday, Mitt Romney was unusually candid about his policy plans, offering details about what he expects to implement if elected president in November.

According to NBC News, the former Massachusetts governor said he may decide to eliminate several government agencies, including the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which was once led by his father, George Romney.

“I’m going to take a lot of departments in Washington, and agencies, and combine them. Some eliminate, but I’m probably not going to lay out just exactly which ones are going to go,” Romney said. “Things like Housing and Urban Development, which my dad was head of, that might not be around later.”

Although Romney refused to make specific calls about each agency, he did suggest that the Department of Education would see major changes under a Romney presidency.

“I will either consolidate with another agency, or perhaps make it a heck of a lot smaller,” Romney said. “I’m not going to get rid of it entirely,” explaining that to do so could be a political pitfall and would eliminate a way to push back on powerful teacher unions.

Romney also acknowledged the key role those unions will have on the election, since many of them have pledged support for President Barack Obama.

“The unions will put in hundreds of millions of dollars,” Romney said. “There’s nothing like it on our side.”

According to the Wall Street Journal, Romney also outlined which tax deductions he planned to cut.

“I’m going to probably eliminate for high-income people the second-home mortgage deduction,” he said. He also expressed similar plans for the state income tax deduction and state property tax deduction. As the Wall Street Journal points out, this is the first time Romney specifically named which deductions he would cut.

Romney also took the opportunity to discuss his campaign’s efforts to win over key demographics in the general election against Obama. According to Romney, an inability to attract Hispanic voters “spells doom” for the Republican Party.

“We have to get Hispanic voters to vote for our party,” Romney said, citing a “Republican DREAM Act” as a potential way to give these voters a choice between the two parties. The version backed by Democrats offers a limited path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.

He also acknowledged that in order to attract typically Democratic-leaning voters, his campaign would have to reach beyond the Fox News media sphere.

“Fox is watched by the true believers,” Romney said. “We need to get the independents and the women.”

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Friday Blog Round Up

Game Change

Obama’s Imaginary Tax Increase

Proof that “voter fraud” is Jim Crow 2.0

Will Adelson Bail On Gingrich?

Rubio Takes The Dream Out Of DREAM Act

Fox Defends Texas’ Voter ID Law With Fraud

Suspect in Afghan Attack ‘Snapped,’ U.S. Official Says

White House moves into full reelection mode

Mitt Romney finally gets around to condemning … Bill Maher

Greg Sargent: The Romney campaign’s idea of `tough decisions’

Texas loses Medicaid funding in effort to spite Planned Parenthood 

Video: Santorum’s pursuit of Romney hindered by money, organization

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The “Real” Reason For Rick Perry’s Fall From The Tea Party Throne

If you say that we should not educate children who come into our state for no other reason than that they’ve been brought there through no fault of their own, I don’t think you have a heart. We need to be educating these children, because they will become a drag on our society.”

No one is talking about the real reason Texas Governor Rick Perry is no longer the darling of right-wing  pundits or the Tea Party after last week’s debate.

Most pundits site Perry’s fumbling and bumbling over an attack on Mitt Romney’s “flip-flop” record.

The truth is that even Perry’s staunchest supporters, who are mostly comprised of Tea Partiers or Tea Party sympathizers, don’t agree with his admission of support for immigrants who were brought to this country as children, through no fault of their own.   When he expressed his feelings about the state sponsored “DREAM Act” for those “illegal immigrants” the entire dynamic changed.  To top it off, Perry stated that anyone who didn’t understand the reasoning and compassion behind the Texas Dream Act…”didn’t have a heart.”

Red State’s reaction:

Rick Perry is free to defend his position as he sees it on the merits, but to suggest his critics are heartless is right out of the liberal textbook. As conservatives it is bad enough that we must endure such assaults from liberals and their acolytes in the mainstream media, but we’ve come to expect that and have effectively rebutted this view. But from Rick Perry? A conservative Republican Governor of Texas to criticize a dissenting view to label his conservative critics “heartless”?  I would expect that from Barack Obama or Bill Clinton or Michael Moore, but from the front runner in a contest for President?

Mike Keuber’s Blog:

Rick Perry has caught a lot of flak for his most recent debate performance.  Although he had numerous low points, his lowest was his defense of in-state tuition for illegal immigrants:

  • If you say that we should not educate children who come into our state for no other reason than that they’ve been brought there through no fault of their own, I don’t think you have a heart. We need to be educating these children, because they will become a drag on our society.”

There are at least three problems with this response – one was unavoidable, one was easily avoidable, and one was inexcusable:

  1. Unavoidable.  The unavoidable problem was that in 2001 Perry had signed-off on a bipartisan law, but now he is faced with partisan primary voters.  At the Christian Science Monitor cogently described - “For Perry, his state’s version of the Obama administration’s ‘Dream Act’ proposal for helping students without legal immigrant status has become like ‘RomneyCare’ – a state-specific position that’s hard to justify in the context of today’s national debate on such issues.”
  2. Avoidable.  The avoidable problem was that Perry was unable to speak clearly.  Perry knew that this question was coming, so he should have been able to rehearse an articulate response.  Instead he gave a response with jumbled syntax.
  3. Inexcusable.  Perry knew that many Republican voters disagreed with his position, but instead of trying to persuade them that his position was reasonable, he criticized them for not having a heart.  I don’t think he read Carnegie’s How to Win Friends and Influence People.

As Keuber mentions, Perry’s Texas Dream Act will always be compared to Obama-Care.

So Perry’s issue is not that he flubbed a rebuttal to Mitt Romney’s statements, but that he supports some form of  illegal immigration, albeit a very small part in the complex overall scheme on the issue of immigration.  That is a faux pas as far as the Tea Party and other right-wing conservatives are concerned.

Rick Perry ignored the sacred Tea Party’s mantra: “stick to the party line”, and now, he may pay dearly for that.  No amount of apologies will change the hearts and minds of those folks.

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Obama To Make A Grassroots Push For DREAM Act, Won’t Engage In Filibuster Reform Fight

Development, Relief and Education for Alien Mi...

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I was happy to hear the POTUS say that he has not given up on the Dream Act.

Huffington Post

The White House is preparing a major grassroots push to pass the DREAM Act next year, which President Obama said Wednesday was one of his top priorities after the legislation failed in the recent lame duck session. Acknowledging the next Congress will be much more resistant to the President’s agenda, the White House also backs changing the rules of the Senate, although it won’t get involved in specific proposals.

On a conference call with journalists Wednesday, White House Communications Director Dan Pfeiffer said the President is willing to “wage a very public campaign” to push the DREAM Act, which would grant undocumented students who were brought into the United States as minors by their parents a path to citizenship through higher education or military service. He added that grassroots activism will be essential to success.

“The President always said on the campaign trail that change comes from the bottom up, and on issues like the DREAM Act, it has to, because there’s some real resistance in Washington — primarily in the other party, but some in our own — and I think we’re going to need to get people activated, and I think you’ll see a lot of that over the next months and years,” said Pfeiffer in response to a question from The Huffington Post.

During a news conference Wednesday, Obama said he will be reaching out to Republicans who may believe “in their heart of hearts” that passing the DREAM Act is the right thing to do but think the politics are tough.

“Well, that may mean that we’ve got to change the politics,” said Obama. “And I’ve got to spend some time talking to the American people, and others have to spend time talking to the American people, because I think that if the American people knew any of these kids — they probably do, they just may not know their status — they’d say, of course we want you. That’s who we are. That’s the better angels of our nature.”  More…

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Monday Afternoon Blog Round Up

Graham: I Was Forced To ‘Ignore’ START, Because Other ‘Major Iss..
Last night on the Senate floor, Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) complained that it had..

Enrollment of Muslim students is growing at Catholic colleges in U.S.
The influx has astonished and sometimes befuddled administrators. Some Catholic campu..

Food Safety Bill passes Senate
Not a bad surprise after years of failure in Washington on the issue of food safety. ..

So Not Ready for Prime Time
Most folks familiar with the history of the last half century know the ‘White Citize..

McCain’s DADT Rant
Did you catch John McCain’s rant about DADT just before the weekend vote? Watch .

Fox News, misinformation, and the easiest job in the world
Last week a study conducted at the University of Maryland showed that: … regular v..

Sunday Show Guests Assail Republicans For Blocking The DREAM Act
Yesterday, Senate Republicans blocked the DREAM Act from securing 60 votes to pass c..

Kyl Denies Health Care For 9/11 Rescue Workers Because He Doesn’t Want..
Committed to the obstruction of any Democratic priority , Senate Republicans success..

Right-wing Media Continue To Cheer For Government Shutdown
Right-wing media figures used bills currently under consideration in Congress to con..

Kay Hagan’s Office Vandalized (VIDEO)
Sen. Kay Hagan’s (D-N.C.) Greenville, North Carolina, office was targeted last week ..

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