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NY Times columnist reports McCain "has so far emphasized border security more than the Democrats," not that it's a reversal of his position on immigration

March 02, 2008 7:38 pm ET
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SUMMARY: A New York Times Week in Review piece stated: "Senator John McCain, the early Republican front-runner whose championing of the bill [Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007] had made him look soft on illegal immigration, faded in the polls," adding that now McCain has "emphasized border security more than the Democrats have." But the article didn't mention that this "emphasi[s]" on border security is at odds with his previous position.

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In a March 2 New York Times Week in Review piece, columnist and Times Magazine staff writer David Leonhardt wrote that after the defeat of the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007, "Senator John McCain, the early Republican front-runner whose championing of the bill had made him look soft on illegal immigration, faded in the polls," and asked: "How could Mr. McCain's resurgence happen only six months after Americans deluged members of Congress with phone calls opposing an immigration bill that would have provided a path to citizenship for many people in the country illegally?" Later in the article, Leonhardt stated "Mr. McCain, who says he was chastened by the reaction to the immigration bill, has so far emphasized border security more than the Democrats have." But Leonhardt didn't mention that McCain's current "emphasi[s]" on border security constitutes a reversal of his previous position on immigration.

In fact, McCain's current position -- that "we've got to secure the borders first" -- is at odds with his prior position that border security could not be disaggregated from other aspects of comprehensive immigration reform without being rendered ineffective. As The Washington Post noted in a February 20 article, "What McCain is saying has changed. Whereas once he firmly said that no immigration legislation could work unless it twinned tougher border enforcement with a guest-worker program and a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants, he now maintains that sealing the border must come first."

In a March 30, 2006, Senate floor statement, McCain said: "While strengthening border security is an essential component of national security, it must also be accompanied by immigration reforms." He added: "[A]s long as there are jobs available in this country for people who live in poverty and hopelessness in other countries, those people will risk their lives to cross our borders -- no matter how formidable the barriers -- and most will be successful." Asserting that "[o]ur reforms need to reflect that reality," McCain said, "We need to establish a temporary worker program that permits workers from other countries -- to the extent they are needed -- to fill jobs that would otherwise go unfilled."

Additionally, at no point did Leonhardt note that during CNN's January 30 Republican presidential debate, McCain asserted that he "would not" support his own comprehensive immigration proposal that included a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants if it came to a vote on the Senate floor. From the debate:

JANET HOOK (Los Angeles Times staff writer): Senator McCain, let me just take the issue to you, because you obviously have been very involved in it. During this campaign, you, like your rivals, have been putting the first priority, heaviest emphasis on border security. But your original immigration proposal back in 2006 was much broader and included a pathway to citizenship for illegal immigrants who are already here.

What I'm wondering is -- and you seem to be downplaying that part. At this point, if your original proposal came to a vote on the Senate floor, would you vote for it?

McCAIN: It won't. It won't. That's why we went through the debate --

HOOK: I know, but what if it did?

McCAIN: No, I would not, because we know what the situation is today. The people want the borders secured first. And so to say that that would come to the floor of the Senate -- it won't. We went through various amendments which prevented that ever -- that proposal.

From Leonharadt's Times Week in Review piece, headlined "The Border and the Ballot Box":

ON June 7 of last year, a bill to overhaul the nation's immigration system -- a bill supported by President Bush and the Democratic leaders of Congress -- died in the Senate. It died mostly because of grass-roots opposition, and its downfall appeared to serve as an announcement of the issue's new political potency. For much of 2007, immigration seemed certain to play a dominant role in the 2008 presidential campaign.

After the bill failed, Senator John McCain, the early Republican front-runner whose championing of the bill had made him look soft on illegal immigration, faded in the polls. The new Republican front-runners, Rudolph W. Giuliani and Mitt Romney, were trading accusations over who had been nicer to illegal immigrants in the past. "It's been wonderful," Representative Tom Tancredo, the most emphatically anti-immigration candidate, said during a Republican debate in November, "because all I've heard is people trying to out-Tancredo Tancredo."

[...]

In retrospect, those final weeks of 2007 -- just before actual voting began -- look like the recent high point for criticisms of illegal immigration. Consider that Mr. Huckabee was the one Republican candidate who seemed even friendlier to immigrants, including illegal ones, than Mr. McCain. In the November debate when other candidates tried to out-Tancredo each other, Mr. Huckabee instead upbraided Mr. Romney for his views on in-state tuition. "In all due respect, we're a better country than to punish children for what their parents did," Mr. Huckabee told him. "We're a better country than that."

In early January, he won the Iowa caucus in an upset of Mr. Romney. Shortly before the caucus, Mr. Tancredo became the first candidate to quit the campaign, evidently fearful that he would not even attract a respectable protest vote.

It's hard, in fact, to see how a single 2008 Republican candidate benefited from anti-immigration rhetoric. All the while, Mr. McCain's campaign bus was being followed around the early-voting states by a white van called the "Amnesty Truth Express." Outside his Florida headquarters in West Palm Beach, a few days before he won the primary that established him as the clear front-runner, the van displayed a sign reading, "McCain Equals Amnesty."

How could Mr. McCain's resurgence happen only six months after Americans deluged members of Congress with phone calls opposing an immigration bill that would have provided a path to citizenship for many people in the country illegally? And how could it happen when several states, including Arizona and Colorado, have recently implemented laws to make life harder for these immigrants? The country's previous backlashes offer something of a guide.

[...]

"The only scenario I can see for reform is one that tries to damp down the frenzy about illegal immigration," Christopher Jencks, a Harvard sociologist who has studied the subject, said. To varying degrees, Mr. McCain and his Democratic opponent -- whether Hillary Rodham Clinton or Barack Obama -- will most likely try to balance security and openness in the general-election campaign. Mr. McCain, who says he was chastened by the reaction to the immigration bill, has so far emphasized border security more than the Democrats have.

No matter how it happens, the country will almost certainly need an influx of new arrivals in coming decades. The baby boomers are about to start turning 65. Someone will have to take their place in the work force - and help pay their Medicare and Social Security bills.

After a year of political whiplash, it seems safe to conclude that the anti-immigration fervor was never as bad as it seemed but isn't permanently gone, either. As ever, we Americans like to say that we live in a nation of immigrants. But we are also prone to believing that the last great immigrants were the ones who arrived decades ago. The country can never quite make up its mind how open it should be.

It was in 1882, after all, that Congress significantly restricted immigration for the first time, by passing the Chinese Exclusion Act. Only four years later, the Statue of Liberty -- "the Mother of Exiles," in the words of the Emma Lazarus poem inscribed inside the statute -- rose above New York Harbor.

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    • Author by copiousdissent.blogspot.com (March 02, 2008 8:11 pm ET)
         

      This is so hypocritical.

      When John Edwards came out against the War, and everyone said that he was one of the strongest advocates against the War, MMFA would have gone crazy had anyone called him a flip-flopper.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by mary59 (March 02, 2008 8:40 pm ET)
           
        Your comment had no connection to the article, nor to reality. Did you even read it?
        Report Abuse
      • Author by princeofwheels (March 03, 2008 8:30 am ET)
           

        I have never visited your blogspot...if your thinking there is anything like your thinking is here, I have advice for you, QUIT blogging.

        Amazingly, you never want to discuss anything you read here. WHY? Maybe you could blogspot that. But then, no one here would know your answer. Which would be okay with most here.

        Report Abuse
    • Author by TelltaleHeart (March 02, 2008 9:58 pm ET)
         

      MMfA would be outraged if Edwards was falsly accused of being a flip-flopper, so they are hypocritical for pointing out that McCain wasn't correctly called a flip-flopper?

      Wow. That's some quality thunkin'.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by bcvb1949a (March 02, 2008 11:39 pm ET)
         

      We already have a law in place regarding our Southern border.  It has not been enforced by any Party.

      If we are to remain a Democracy we must stop illegals from coming into this Country or we may have another 9/11 on our hands. 

       

      Report Abuse
      • Author by Col. Harlan Sanders (March 03, 2008 12:12 am ET)
           
        BVD, are you saying that if the Mexican terrorists pull off another attack like the last one they did, we'll have to change our entire system of government? Do you have a newsletter I can subscribe to?
        Report Abuse
        • Author by mary59 (March 03, 2008 12:59 am ET)
             
          Colonel, so glad you're here. Especially since huntington beach lefty seems to have left the scene. We need that wry sense of humor, thanks.
          Report Abuse
      • Author by mefirst (March 03, 2008 7:49 am ET)
           

        the issue of 9-11 aside, the fact is that we are not enforcing our southern border.  governor bill richardson of new mexico and governor janet napolitano of arizona, both democrats, declared border emergencies in 2005 because of a surge in crime directly linked to illegal entry into their states.  see link.

        http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/latin_america/july-dec05/borders_8-18.html

        Report Abuse
        • Author by mefirst (March 03, 2008 12:59 pm ET)
             

          and this has absolutely nothing to do with right wing rhetoric.  the paper is the las vegas sun.  there are kidnappings that occur at the rate of almost one per day in phoenix and almost all are connected to drug and smuggling rings, and most of the families deny that there is any connection to crime.  the manpower spent on investigating these crimes has to be expensive.

          http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2008/jan/11/kidnappings-prevalent-in-phoenix/

          Report Abuse
    • Author by Clevenative (March 03, 2008 9:38 am ET)
         

      The immigration issue is a problem that has no perfect solution. Perhaps this is why all anyone seems to do is talk about it? One side of me looks at strict border enforcement as more fear-mongering from the right – the other side tells me that the events of 9-11 have highlighted the fact that we need to know who we are letting into this country and that open borders present a major security risk.

      The question is how effective would something like a fence or wall – virtual or tangible – be in making us more secure? And even if it did raise our security, would the level of security benefits justify the costs? If we pour money into a southern fence wouldn’t it only be logical to do the same to the north? What about the hundreds of cargo ships that pour into our ports with inadequate monitoring? Then there are the possibilities of private planes and boats.  I question the legitimacy of any fence or wall project as doing nothing more than lining the pockets of contractors and corporations involved in such a mass project. (The reason that this seems to be the top Republican “solution”?)

      My personal feeling is that the best use of resources lies in an increased manpower in the intelligence community in the form of more covert and undercover agents posing as sympathizers. Can you imagine how many agents could be hired and jobs created in the intelligence community with the money that might be wasted on building and maintaining a fence or wall? Not only would a vastly increased intelligence community provide a less visible and obvious form of added security while providing Americans an appearance of “life as usual”, but it would diminish the appearance of  America as a police state while instilling a false sense of emboldenment to would-be terrorists.  (For my far-left friends who see any surveillance by “the man” as oppressive, I didn’t say it would make us any less of a police state – just that it would reduce the “appearance” vs. a fence or wall “solution”.;))

      As for the many immigrants who are coming here in search of “The American Dream”, I believe all should be documented and abide by the laws already in place, and that local law enforcement should have as big a role in enforcement of our immigration laws as does any federal agency – this includes prosecution of anyone who hires undocumented workers. It’s too late now to do much about the millions already here – but we should take a firm “from this day forward” stance on this issue.

      Report Abuse
      • Author by mefirst (March 03, 2008 12:33 pm ET)
           
        so are you saying give up on trying to enforce the border?  there are already numerous fences along the border in california?  tear them down?  and it seems to me that what you are proposing would be vastly more expensive.  basically let anyone in and then spend money to monitor them.  and you do not need to cover every inch of the coast.  the coast guard has ships in the florida straits to turn back cubans and haitians trying to enter illegally.  it't quite cost effective. 
        Report Abuse
        • Author by Clevenative (March 03, 2008 2:32 pm ET)
             
          I'd hate to see our country look like Berlin did for so many years. How many years would it take before both out neighbors leaders were giving speeches that included the line, "Mr President, tear down that wall!"?
          Report Abuse
          • Author by mefirst (March 03, 2008 2:35 pm ET)
               
            and what would the line be?  tear down that wall so our citizens can enter your country without authorization?   not quite the same as berlin.
            Report Abuse
        • Author by Clevenative (March 03, 2008 2:52 pm ET)
             
          And I never said to "give up on enforcing the border" or to "let anyone in". I'm all for stricter enforcement of the border - I just think a wall is so "cold war" - not to mention insulting to our neighbors. The initial cost of building such an eyesore is astronomical - you can almost be guaranteed it will be near double of what the "projected cost" is  - and it would still have to be maintained and monitored. There are so many other problems with this idea - like he environmental aspects - loss of roaming domain for wildlife - farmers loosing graze land and acecess to natural water sources for their cattle, etc. Some will argue that nuclear power plants are a nice energy "solution" too - unless someone wants to build one in your backyard. Same thing here - the lawsuits alone would triple the cost to the taxpayers.
          Report Abuse
          • Author by mefirst (March 03, 2008 4:42 pm ET)
               
            so stricter enforcement at the border is ok, but a fence is insulting?   and  what the border patrol says is that fences help them do their job because it slows illegal crossers down and it takes fewer agent to catch more people.  so your proposal is more expensive. 
            Report Abuse
    • Author by puttforever4682 (March 04, 2008 6:00 am ET)
         
      The immigration issue is very complex,but many times what is left out of the conversation is the fact that legal immigration procedures are in complete disarray. How many years waiting list (10+) is a testament to the snail like bureaucracy.  Our employers that violate the existing laws the most are large companies that are well connected in Congress.  The corruption of our government should be the biggest single issue in the campaign, since this effects our economy and our way of life
      Report Abuse

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