Today's Wall Street Journal has an insightful editorial on the House Republicans' assault on what is really the president's immigration plan - a plan that Mayor Giuliani believes strengthens our national security. "The Kennedy bill" is how some House members refer to the Senate bill. But I don't remember all those House Republicans who voted for the "No Child Left Behind Act" refer to that legislation as "the Kennedy bill." He, of course, was a primary Senate backer of the act. The Journal editors argue that the House enforcement-only position is bad policy and bad politics. They write:
Even if all of this somehow works this election year, the long term damage to the GOP could be considerable. Pete Wilson demonized illegal aliens to win re-election as California Governor in 1994, but at the price of alienating Latino voters for a decade. The smarter Republicans--President Bush, Karl Rove, Senator John McCain, Colorado Governor Bill Owens and Florida Governor Jeb Bush--understand that the GOP can't sustain its majority without a larger share of the Hispanic vote. Making Mr. Tancredo the spokesman on this issue is a surefire way to make Hispanics into permanent Democrats.
All this brings me to the comments of Don Goldwater, who is seeking the GOP nod to run against Arizona governor Napolitano. His recent remarks, covered in a local paper, concerning his illegal immigration plan are now being picked-up in the Hispanic media and likely soon by national media outlets. From the Arizona Republic:
Goldwater promised to put undocumented workers in a "tent city" at the border. "It's my intention to take illegals and put them down at the border in a tent city and use them as labor to build the fence and clean up the desert they are tearing up," said Goldwater, who didn't offer any specifics for his plans that some construe as unconstitutional.
Republican leaders should roundly and categorically denounce his plan before it unfairly tars the party of Reagan. They may also want to take a second look at the immigration proposal put forth by conservative Mike Pence of Indiana, who, as the Journal notes, offers Republicans "a way out of their political mess."