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W Never Had It This Easy

Americans, particularly conservatives on their side of the divide (more or less), would have nothing of attempts by President Bush and U.S. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) at so-called comprehensive immigration reform. So both backed off, said they had "heard from the people," and agreed that border security had to come first.
 
They had also heard the same – a lot earlier – from U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.), but they didn't like it and paid no heed.
 
During the 2008 presidential campaign, Barack Obama got to romance Hispanics and leftist open borders advocates by promising immigration reform early in the presidency he sought. And, of course, trashing McCain and his party for refusing to support anything less.
 
Another day, another course reversal. Obama's script today calls for – what? – border security first!
 
And what do we hear from the amnesty/open borders crowd? Nothing. Probably intimidated like those new socialists among big businesses getting bailed out with all that taxpayer cash.
 
 
 
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Immigration Reform: Take It in Steps, then Enforce the Law

"The Obama administration, and Congress, may need to pass immigration reform piecemeal.

"Secure the border first. Then create a system that allows for guest workers and a fraud-proof identifier so the government can crack down on businesses that knowingly hire illegal workers. A guest-worker program would eliminate the dangerous human smuggling and border crossings and alleviate such related crimes as identity theft that now occur as a way of filling jobs.

"Then maybe there will be some political will to talk about a path to citizenship for those already here."

So concluded The Denver Post in an editorial published April 10.

Except for one glaring omission, The Post has it right about a step-by-step approach. President Bush couldn't get that right. U.S. Sen.John McCain (R-Ariz.) couldn't get that right (but claimed later to have "learned" from the huge citizen backlash against "comprehensive" reform). We'll see whether President Obama can get it right.
 
The Post's glaring omission is birthright citizenship. A guest worker program must be preceded by Congress and the president acting to fix the unacceptably liberal interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
 
 
The Rocky Mountain Foundation's chairman Tom Tancredo sees it this way.
 
The Rocky Mountain Foundation's president John Dendahl sees it this way.
 
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