Tag Archives: Immigration Reform

Tea Party Congressman Exploits Manhunt For Suspected Boston Bomber To Advance Weaker Gun Laws

In my humble opinion, Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) generally has some serious issues

Think Progress

A Tea Party Congressman has joined a growing listof conservatives are seizing on the manhunt for the Boston Marathon bombing suspect to argue for looser gun laws. Appearing on The Blaze Thursday afternoon, Rep. Louie Gohmert (R-TX) suggested that the Bostonians on lock down need high capacity magazines to protect themselves from violence. Via Kyle Mantyla at Right Wing Watch:

What hit me this morning when I heard the residents there around Boston and in the area where they thought someone might be were ordered to stay in their homes, businesses were ordered closed, public transportation was ordered closed. Let me ask you, if you’re sitting in your home and you know there are only two possibilities for people coming, one is law enforcement and the other is somebody who has already killed Americans and continues to do so, how many rounds do you want to be limited to in your magazine as you sit in your chair and wait?

Watch it:

Earlier this week, Gohmert claimed that the Boston tragedy should give pause to immigration reform advocates who seek to reform the system, an argument that several Republican leaders are now advancing.

 

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Filed under Boston Marathon Bombings, Guns, Rep. Louie Gohmert

Why immigration reform won’t be enough for the GOP to win Latino voters

Latino protesters march by the hotel where Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney is scheduled to attend a fundraising event in Salt Lake City, Utah, September 17. (Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)

Latino protesters march by the hotel where Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney is scheduled to attend a fundraising event in Salt Lake City, Utah, September 17. (Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)

The GOP remind me of the silent movie comedy group called The Keystone Kops.

The term has since come to be used to criticize any group for its mistakes, particularly if the mistakes happened after a great deal of energy and activity, or if there was a lack of coordination among the members of the group. - Wiki

Less then a year ago members of the GOP were saying this, this and this about immigration.  After the 2012 election which gave Barack Obama 71% of the Latino vote, they are now trying to change their tune, thinking that they can actually get away with this current folly of theirs…

By the way, in my opinion, the term “illegal” is reprehensible when referring to any human being.

MSNBC

Republicans need to win more Latino voters if they want to remain a politically relevant party. The imperative to win back those voters is so strong that Senator John McCain openly admits it’s the reason others in his party are willing to embrace immigration reform, an issue many otherwise oppose.

But the bad news is that immigration reform may not be enough to help the party close the gap on the growing part of the American electorate.

Two key polls from 2012 explain why. A Pew survey found a majority of Hispanics say education, jobs/economy, and health care are “extremely important.” Only one in three said immigration was equally important. Even the federal budget deficit ranked higher, and Republicans have failed to win over Latino voters on that issue.

The Republican “small government” mantra won’t appeal to most Latinos either, as two in three said they preferred a “larger federal government with more services” over a smaller one in a Washington Post poll from last year.

Even some Republicans admit the chances for winning over the Latino electorate are slim. “Anyone who believes that they’re going to win over the Latino vote is grossly mistaken,” Congressman Lou Barletta told the Morning Call. “They will become Democrats because of the social programs they’ll depend on.”

But the biggest indication that the GOP is hopeless when it comes to shrinking the 44-point gap by which Romney lost Hispanic voters may be the memo sent to House Republicans yesterday.

Fresh off the heels of retreat events like “Successful Communication with Women and Minorities,” the conservative Hispanic Leadership Network is circulating a memo on the do’s and don’t’s of how Republicans should address immigration reform issues.

The do’s:

  • Acknowledge “our current immigration system is broken”
  • use the phrases “earned legal status” and “undocumented immigrants”

The don’t’s:

  • start the conversation out with “we are against amnesty”
  • use the phrases “pathway to citizenship,” “illegals,” “aliens,” or “anchor babies”

It’s not a good sign that Republicans are still learning to master the language to not offend the fastest growing demographic of the American electorate, but it’s dangerous to bank on any group of that sized voting on a single-issue.

Full memo below.

HLN memo

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Filed under GOP Hate-Mongering, Immigration Reform

Limbaugh: It’s Up To Me And Fox News To Stop Amnesty

Good luck with that…

TPM Livewire

Conservative talk radio personality Rush Limbaugh said on his show Monday that it was up to himself and the Fox News network to stop a bipartisan effort to pass immigration reform which would create a path to citizenship for the 11 million undocumented immigrants living in the United States.

“It’s up to me and Fox News,” Limbaugh said, “and I don’t think Fox News is that invested in this.”

He continued: “I don’t think there’s any Republican opposition to this of any majority consequence or size. We’ll have to wait and see and find out.  But this is one of those, just keep plugging away, plugging away, plugging away until you finally beat down the opposition.”

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Filed under Fox News, Immigration Reform, Rush Limbaugh

Lou Dobbs brings his immigration lies to Fox (Video)

It was just a matter of time… 

Media Matters 

Fox News’ America Live repeatedly hosts Lou Dobbs to mislead on immigration issues, despite his history of making false and absurd claims on the issue, such grossly overestimating the number of new leprosy cases in the U.S. and blaming that distorted figure on immigrants. 

Dobbs pushes Sen. Kyl’s claim–which Kyl later walked back–that Obama told Kyl “he would hold border security hostage” to get comprehensive immigration reform. On the August 26 edition of America Live, Dobbs pushed the claim that “Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona, remember, saying that it was very straightforward, that the President said he would hold border security hostage to so-called comprehensive immigration reform.” Host Megyn Kelly had to correct Dobbs, by noting that Kyl “dialed that back later.” 

Burton: “The president didn’t say that. Senator Kyl knows the president didn’t say that.” The Washington Post reported on June 21 that Kyl “said that President Obama personally told him the administration will not support stricter border enforcement until Republicans back broad immigration reform.” The Post continued: 

The White House strongly denied the claim. 

At a town hall in Arizona on Friday, Kyl responded to a voter’s question about immigration by detailing a one-on-one meeting he had with Obama. According to Kyl, “The president said the problem is if we secure the border, then you all won’t have any reason to support comprehensive immigration reform.” 

“In other words, they’re holding it hostage,” Kyl said at the event, a video of was circulated widely online on Monday, but not from Kyl’s office. “They won’t secure the border unless and until is it combined with comprehensive immigration reform.” 

Bill Burton, a White House spokesman, said, “The president didn’t say that. Senator Kyl knows the president didn’t say that.” 

Continue reading… 

 

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Filed under Lou Dobbs, Megyn Kelly, Uncategorized

Churches are looking at immigration’s upside

Politico – Ben Smith

Evangelical groups in recent weeks have become key players in the Obama administration’s efforts to get immigration reform moving in Congress. And while they have largely couched their arguments in moral terms or with references to biblical teachings, top leaders acknowledge another important reason:

Latino immigrants, legal and illegal, represent fertile prospects for proselytizing.

“First and foremost, it’s a kingdom issue, and, second, it’s a moral issue,” Richard Land, president of the Southern Baptist Convention, told POLITICO. “We have hundreds of thousands of Hispanic Southern Baptists and many of them are undocumented. … It’s no secret that we practice aggressive evangelism. Many of these people were converted after they got here.”

Leith Anderson, president of the National Association of Evangelicals, puts it another way. “When people migrate, they’re open to all kinds of change, including religious change. Evangelical denominations have historically drawn immigrants. … The growing edge of many of our denominations is through immigration from all over the world.”

Anderson insisted, however, that his organization was urging the government to act because of broader moral and social concerns — and not to help churches fill their pews.        Continue reading…

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Filed under Immigration, Immigration Reform, Southern Baptist Conference

Is Bill Stealing Obama’s Mojo?

Mark McKinnonThe Daily Beast

Former President Clinton bucked the White House in endorsing the challenger in Colorado’s Senate race. Mark McKinnon on why 42’s popularity is surging—while Obama may be the kiss of death this fall.

Barack Obama may have bested Hillary Clinton for the presidency, and he may have kept her from causing him political trouble by appointing her secretary of State. But nothing in the contract said her husband Bill was going to stay down on the farm. And he’s not.

Tuesday, former President Bill Clinton endorsed state House Speaker Andrew Romanoff in Colorado’s Democratic primary for the Senate seat currently held by Sen. Michael Bennet, who has President Obama’s support.

In a poll recently released by Public Policy Polling, 48 percent of likely voters say support from President Barack Obama would make them less likely to vote for a candidate.

Bill Clinton, the “Comeback Kid,” is back again—and stirring things up as only he can. Straying from the playbook is bad enough, but it has to be a source of some frustration and teeth-gnashing for Obama’s inner circle that Bill Clinton has become a more popular campaign surrogate and endorser than their boss.

The former president’s favorables are now at 51 percent, higher than Obama’s. And it was Clinton, with his strong appeal among working-class voters, who helped both Rep. Mark Critz (Pennsylvania) and the embattled Sen. Blanche Lincoln (Arkansas) slug it out in their races.

Bryan Curtis: Obama’s Immigration Surge

The Rocky Balboa of politics, Bill Clinton is always ready to step back in the ring. Training hard, he has focused on rebuilding his legacy. He joined former President George H.W. Bush in a public campaign to raise money for survivors of the 2004 tsunami. He’s established a foundation focused on fixing some of the world’s most pressing challenges, and more recently with former President George W. Bush, coordinated U.N. relief efforts after the Haiti earthquake.

Love him or loathe him, Bubba inspires “The Real Thing”—brand loyalty.

Ironically, in a poll recently released by Public Policy Polling, 48 percent of likely voters say support from President Barack Obama would make them less likely to vote for a candidate. A sea change, indeed. Obama rewrote the rules for political campaigning and brand marketing in 2008, winning millions of new voters, young voters, and independents. But after a bruising year and a half in office, some of the luster of transparency and transcendency is gone.

Reeling from both “man-caused” and natural disasters, the Obama brand is under siege and not just from Republicans.

Über-liberal Janeane Garofalo delivers a body blow: “I have to say I was surprised how disappointing the Obama administration has turned out to be.” And for the knockout: “I am more used to it now.” She’s not alone. Jon Stewart jabs David Axelrod: “Has government during this time proved itself competent?” And from Bob Herbert in The New York Times: Barack Obama and the Democrats “have wasted the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity handed to them in the 2008 election.”

And it’s even tougher in the crowd out there. Sixty-four percent of likely voters say the nation is on the wrong track. Now just 20 percent of registered voters identify themselves as liberals, while 42 percent call themselves conservatives. And not only are conservatives trending up (with liberals trending down), they are also significantly more enthusiastic about voting in the 2010 congressional elections.

Even independents are ready to throw in the towel. By more than a 2-1 margin, independents agree more Republicans are needed in Congress as “a check and balance on runaway Washington government.”

The New York Times reports Obama’s standing among independents has dropped from a high of 63 percent early in his presidency to about 47 percent now. And Rasmussen shows 57 percent of voters now feel Hillary Clinton is qualified to be president while only 51 percent say Obama is fit for the job.

So will an endorsement by Obama hurt Dems’ chances in November?

Despite a lot of footwork, Obama couldn’t help Sen. Arlen Specter (PA), the fourth Democrat in seven months to lose a high-profile race. His endorsement didn’t help Gov. Jon Corzine (NJ), state Sen. Creigh Deeds (VA) or Attorney General Martha Coakley (MA). And though Obama backed Rep. Critz in the elimination bout for the late Sen. John Murtha’s seat, Critz opposed Obama’s health -are plan and even skipped the president’s visit to Pennsylvania a few weeks back.

President Obama’s approval rating is just 40 percent in the 60 most vulnerable Democratic House districts, and at 46.6 percent nationally. History tells us when a president is below 50 percent nationally, his party loses more than 40 seats. Republicans only need to pick up 40 seats in the House and 10 in the Senate to take control. And it can be done. In 1994, Republicans gained a net total of 54 House seats, eight Senate seats and a majority of governorships.

So it won’t be a big surprise if Democrats, particularly in swing districts, prefer for Obama to stay in DC come fall.

But Bill Clinton will likely be in huge demand, as will Sarah Palin, his Republican counterpart, who has become a heavyweight endorser as well.

For someone who no longer holds elective office and has been summarily dismissed by the press, Palin has an impressive endorsement record this primary season; she’s 9-3 so far. Among her best picks: state Rep. Nikki Haley (SC) and Carly Fiorina (CA).

An interesting title match in the fall elections: Who will have more impact as the party surrogate? Sarah Palin or Bill Clinton? Texas may be one of the races to watch with the Clinton-endorsed former Houston Mayor Bill White (D) challenging Palin’s pick, incumbent Gov. Rick Perry (R).

In the words of Rocky Balboa: “There ain’t nothin’ over till it’s over.”

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Filed under Immigration, Immigration Reform

Congressman and Community Leaders To Risk Arrest at May Day Immigration Protests

Crooks & Liars:

This May 1st, immigrant communities and citizens alike will hit the streets to say no to Arizona’s new “show me your papers law” and yes to real, federal action on immigration reform this year. Eighty cities across the country are gearing up for major rallies, marches, and protests tomorrow. Students who had come in from New York, Florida, and California to participate in the Washington protests led their own action in front of Governor Jan Brewer’s DC office today. They chanted, “Arizona, Shame On You! Immigrants Are People, Too!”    More>>>

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Filed under U.S. Politics

Obama Doubts “Will” For Immigration Reform

 

 

President Obama:

From the onset, I must say that I am not an expert on the political machine in Washington.  I also acknowledge that Barack Obama certainly has a better view of what goes on in Washington than I do, after all he is the POTUS.  However, as a concerned citizen, in spite of  a probable naive perception of how government works, I do have an opinion.
Mr. President, I think this is an ideal time to take on immigration reform sans GOP support in Congress.  The Arizona Law that was just implemented is a clarion call to shine a light on the the urgent need for immigration reform.
 
With a mid-term election just a few months away, and the hell no! strategy of the GOPs in Congress, the Dems can sweep through an immigration reform bill which I am certain will have the support of at least five or six Republican members of the house and/or senate.
 
Dems can campaign on the do nothing GOP.  Dems can point out how constituents send their members of congress to Washington to do “the people’s work” and yet, the GOP have decided to do nothing except block every attempt at legislation so that the Dems can fail.
 
Mr. President, it appears to me that  your lack of will is the problem.  In my opinion Dems are so damned scared of being demonized by the GOP this mid-term election, that they (with your approval and leadership, Mr. President) are afraid to tackle legislation without trying to compromise and frankly, coddle the GOP, only to be ignored and eventually betrayed by the same people who’s behinds you (collectively) kiss in order to achieve bi-partisanship. 
Yes,  Dems  just finished a difficult legislation,  but does that mean they can’t work on another?  Energy will be taken care of and legislated in your first term.   The urgency for immigration reform, in my opinion, supersedes energy legislation right now.
  
When will the Dems stand together and say screw the GOP and screw “bi-partisanship” in favor of the people of the United States, and what they need?  Our country is evolving  into ultra right-wing “state’s rights” totalitarianism.   From the looks of things, it seems as though their purpose is to weaken the executive branch of  government by Congress and the Supreme Court.
 
I was under the impression that Dems won in 2006 and 2008 to form a solid majority, which enables them to get things done.  You even told the Dems that a couple of months ago.  So, please Mr. President, as an ardent supporter and life-long progressive, try to see what we see.  You guys are looking like the kids who fear the bullies in school because they will give you another bloody nose.  Frankly, its embarrassing that the losers of two-consecutive elections are running the show in D.C.

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Filed under Immigration Reform