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politics and politicians Title: Rubio to Jorge Ramos: If I’m elected president, I’ll rescind Obama’s executive mega-amnesty Hes addressed this topic before but we should start paying extra attention to his public comments about it, and not just because hes the clear choice for nominee at this point among much of the Republican commentariat. (And probably soon to be the clear choice of the donor class, if he isnt already.) We have a new Speaker of the House of Representatives, elected this very day, whod have some key common ground with President Rubio. Theyre both in their mid-40s, both center-right, both Mitt Romney allies, both one-time heartthrobs of the conservative base, and both now viewed suspiciously primarily because of one verrry important departure from right-wing orthodoxy that they share. A Rubio/Ryan legislative partnership would be
interesting, potentially great on fiscal reform. And potentially, ahem, not so great on immigration. The good news here is that Rubio stands firm in vowing to get rid of Obamas amnesty for the parents of DREAMers despite the fact that hes at ground zero of American medias pro-illegal propaganda effort. Granted, he couldnt really do otherwise: If he had flipped under questioning from Ramos after vowing to rescind Obamas order earlier this year, border hawks would have gone thermonuclear even though few of them, me included, think Rubios serious about keeping this promise. Thats the bad news. In fact, Ill remind you that he said this in an interview in 2013, while the Gang of Eight bill was still before the Senate: Heres my big worry, Rubio told me during an interview while the bill was making its way through the Senate. I fear that if this thing fails, the president will basically say to anyone in the U.S. who has been here more than three years, who has not committed a serious crime
hell say, Well do for you what we did for the DREAM kids. And the problem with that will be you will have 10 million people legalized in the United States by executive order, so that when there is a new president, if it is a conservative, a Republican, one of the first decisions they will have to make is whether to yank that status from those people and deport them. I cannot imagine a scenario where a future president is going to take away the status theyre going to get. I believe its what [Obama] will do. Maybe not all 10 million, but hell do it for six million. A year later, Obama fulfilled Rubios prediction. At the time, though, this was Rubios way of playing good cop/bad cop with Obama: Either the right could accept half a loaf from the Gang of Eight good cops by tolerating comprehensive reform or the bad cop would legalize everyone on his own and border hawks would get nothing on border security. The bad cop did just that, leaving Rubios other prediction hanging in the balance. How could a new Republican president start his term in office by declaring political war over amnesty and dissolving Obamas executive order? The Democrats and the media (but I repeat myself) will go berserk, sensing a golden opportunity to pull Latino voters further to the left and to damage the new administration before its had time to address any of its other foreign or domestic priorities. The only way to prevent that if youre President Rubio is to make rescission of Obamas order part of a deal in which its immediately reinstated legislatively in some form via a comprehensive bill. Having Mitch McConnell and Paul Ryan as partners would make that quite feasible. And remember: As far as I know, despite his many hedges about the Gang of Eight bill after it collapsed, Rubios never categorically ruled out another stab at comprehensive reform. Hes never pronounced it a bad idea that shouldnt be revisited. What hes said is that its politically impossible right now and therefore we shouldnt waste time on it. Is it still politically impossible with Speaker Ryan in office and Rubio in the White House? What Rubio wont say but what he and every other GOP candidate are hoping is that the courts are going to blow up Obamas amnesty before the next election. If the Supremes dissolve the new legal status for parents of DREAMers, hey. Take it up with your buddy John Roberts, Democrats. Exit question: Rubio notes towards the middle here that most of the calls to his office complaining about immigration are from legal immigrants who resent that illegals get to stay in the United States while theyre stuck in limbo outside the country, waiting years for admission. Thats a great line, but wasnt it also true in 2013? If so, why did Rubio support a bill that would have legalized illegals anyway? Poster Comment: It is apparent that Rubio is already or will shortly become the establishment GOP choice, both conservative media and GOP pols and deep party support with the donor class. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread |
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