Nick Gillespie | July 25, 2007
From the Wash Times:
Rep. Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, an architect of the Democratic campaign that regained control of the House last year, says his party will not attempt comprehensive immigration reform until at least the second term of a prospective Democratic president.
The congressman's statement was reported by a Hispanic activist and confirmed by Mr. Emanuel. "Congressman Rahm Emanuel said to me two weeks ago, there is no way this legislation is happening in the Democratic House, in the Democratic Senate, in the Democratic presidency, in the first term," Juan Salgado, board chairman of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, told the National Council of La Raza (NCLR) at its annual convention last weekend.
For those of us who believe in open borders (or as close to open as you might get), I think this is good news. However rotten the immigration status quo is, the reform bills passing around seem worse, larded with all sorts of employer regulations and restrictions and a committment to some sort of beefed-up, sure-to-be-useless wall and enforcement efforts. And Emanuel's statement strikes me as politically savvy, too. Despite the clamor about the immigration issue, it really isn't the electoral motivator observers claim it to be (that's one of the great unlearned lessons from the 2006 midterms) but it certainly appeals to the worst in candidates and voters.
reason on immigration here.
Help Reason celebrate its next 40 years. Donate Now!
Try Reason's award-winning print edition today! Your first issue is FREE if you are not completely satisfied.
Why isn't SoCalledReason investigating RahmEmanuel's NefariousLinks to the MexicanGovernment?!? ThisOneTime Emanuel WasSeen at a DummyCorporation MechaFront called TacoBell ordering a NumberSix -- he speaks their SecretCode! Aaah BrownPeople!
Ahhh the Democrats. The "party of the people" doing what it does
best. Ignoring issues of the people. Just like Iraq
GIT ER DONE
Nice to see the ugly populists coming out on the left. Maybe my formerly beloved radio talkers will shut up about immigration when they recognize the company they're keeping on this issue.
Despite the clamor about the immigration issue, it really
isn't the electoral motivator observers claim it to be (that's one
of the great unlearned lessons from the 2006 midterms) but it
certainly appeals to the worst in candidates and voters.
It is politically savvy, but not for the reasons you say.
1. The Democrats know this issue would mobilize a lot of otherwise
disgruntled Republicans. So the Dems lay off until a point in time
where Republican mobilization will matter quite a bit less.
2. This has the added benefit of allowing time to run its course,
i.e., millions more immigrants (legal and illegal) crossing the
borders. The more experience people have with these immigrants --
which should generally be good experiences -- the more palatable
immigration "reform" becomes.
Rep. Rahm Emanuel of Illinois, an architect of the
Democratic a terrific dickhead
there ya go...
Scooby | July 25, 2007, 12:05pm | #
No need for the strikethrough. Can't he be both?
AHHHHHHHHHH.
urp
And when the second term of the Democratic president working
with Democratic majorities in both Houses of Congress rolls around,
well, goshdarnit, first we need to elect another Democratic
president, and then in THEIR second term we'll maybe start thinking
about setting up an exploratory committee to consider the
possibility ...
Feel free to substitute "Iraq withdrawal" for "immigration reform"
in the above story.
Site comments/questions:
Media Inquiries and Reprint Permissions:
(310) 367-6109
Editorial & Production Offices:
3415 S. Sepulveda Blvd.
Suite 400
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 391-2245