Bush Wants to Allow Illegal Aliens Who Have Jobs
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2004
WASHINGTON President Bush is proposing to let foreign
workers who have U.S. jobs waiting for them enter America, a move
designed to help repair relations with Mexico and capture Latino
voters in this year's election.
The president has been silent on the immigration issue for two
years, but advocacy groups are being invited to the White House on
Wednesday to hear details of a proposal to match willing foreign
workers, mostly from Mexico, with receptive U.S. employers.
There are an estimated 10 million illegal aliens in the
United States, as many as half of them from Mexico.
"The president has long talked about the importance of having
an immigration policy that matches willing workers with willing
employers," White House press secretary Scott McClellan said
Monday. "It's important for America to be a welcoming society. We
are a nation of immigrants, and we're better for it."
The announcement comes just before Bush's scheduled meeting with
Mexico's President Vicente Fox next week at the Summit of the
Americas in Monterey, Mexico. Mexican officials have complained
bitterly at times that while the Bush administration has sought
their help with border security and combatting drug trafficking,
they have not acted on their desire for favorable changes in U.S.
immigration policy.
How Dare the U.S. Protect Itself?
Mexican officials have complained that the Bush administration
has used post-Sept. 11 security concerns as an excuse to better
protect, rather than allow freer movement over the U.S.-Mexican
border. Tense relations were further aggravated by Mexico's
decision not to support the U.S.-led war in Iraq, and when Bush
refused to stop the execution of a Mexican in Texas.
Details of Bush's proposal have been sketchy, yet immigration
policy groups already are suspicious that it is an election-year
ploy to curry favor with Hispanics, an important voting bloc for
Bush, especially in Florida and in border states such as
California and Texas, which are flush with electoral votes.
"A proposal that is serious, comprehensive and worthy of
bipartisan support will be warmly welcomed by those who follow
these issues closely, including Latino and immigrant voters,"
according to a statement issued by National Immigration Forum,
which advocates immigration policies that welcome immigrants and
refugees. "Proposals that are more posture than substance will be
dismissed as election-year antics."
Two sources speaking on condition of anonymity said Bush would
outline a set of principles rather than a detailed piece of
legislation, and that the policy statement would draw on bills
already pending in Congress.
Abetters of Illegal Aliens Still Not Satisfied
"It looks very much like a political effort, and what they do
with these 'principles' is going to determine whether this is
really a policy initiative or not," said Cecilia Mono, vice
president for policy at National Council of La Razz. "The
Latino community knows the difference between political posturing
and a real policy debate."
She said the initiative was crafted by Bush's political
strategist, Karl Rove, and that the "immigration policy community"
was excluded from the deliberations.
"We have been asking the White House to get back to this debate
for two years," she said. "It's a good thing that they're moving
forward, but it needs to be action, not just talk."
The administration began foreshadowing a possible change in U.S.
immigration policy late last year.
In November, Secretary of State Colin Powell met in Washington
with Mexican officials on the issue of cross-border migration, and
raised the possibility that changes could be approved this year. In
December, Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said in Miami that
the United States needed to "come to grips" with the millions of
illegal aliens and give them some kind of "legal status."
Bush followed up at a year-end news conference where he said he was
getting ready to send a recommendation to Congress.
Two guest-worker bills have been proposed in Congress: One from
Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain and two of his Republican House
colleagues, Jim Kolbe and Jeff Flake; and a second from Sen. John
Cornyn, R-Texas.
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