RUSH: All right, let me swerve into this immigration business, ladies and gentlemen, because we have an AP-Ipsos poll</a> today, and of course — of course! — the vast majority of Americans are totally open to letting immigrants stay here. Of course! Who would have doubted it? “Americans are divided about whether illegal immigrants help or hurt the country, a poll finds. More than one-half of those questioned are open to allowing undocumented workers to obtain some temporary legal status so they can stay in the United States. At the same time, people doubt that erecting a fence along the U.S.-Mexico border could help to fix such a complex and enduring problem, an AP-Ipsos poll found.
“Two-thirds do not think it would work. ‘You can’t go and round up 11 million people and ship them out of the country,’ said Robert Kelly. The Chicago lawyer is among the 56% of Americans who favor offering some kind of legal status. ‘It just isn’t practical,’ he said. A smaller but still significant share — 41% — opposes offering any kind of legal status, giving voice to a law-and-order mind-set that bristles at the notion of officially recognizing those who did not play by the rules to get here. ‘Illegal is criminal,’ said Louella Kelly, a 65-year-old grandmother from Round Rock, Texas.” So it doesn’t surprise me, folks, doesn’t surprise me at all we get the polls out here showing, “Hey, hey. Americans are cool with this. Back off.”
Dick Morris has a column today in the New York Post. It’s entitled, “Menace in Mexico,”</a> and it’s about the immigration debate, and let me just read you a few short excerpts because I want to react to this, because this is a classic illustration of one side of this question whereas we’re looking at it totally from the standpoint and within the context of fear. Voters, future voters, are they going to hate the Republicans? Is it going to backfire and so forth? So we’ve gotta forget what illegal means and we’ve gotta let ’em in and we’ve gotta go out and then try to get those people to be voters of our party on down the road. That’s a fear-based argument, and you know something? In the process of doing that, can I just raise a little question here for you, ladies and gentlemen? Something for you to think about before I get into the Morris piece.
If conservative Republicans are going to compromise their principles, and they’re going to have to compromise their principles, aren’t they? Conservative Republicans would have to compromise their principles in order to go out and secure a voting bloc that votes primarily Democrat. Wouldn’t we have to get rid
Well what good is being a Republican or a conservative if you compromise who you are and what your principles are in order to go get any bloc of voters? I don’t care who they are, and don’t discount that because that seems to be one of the things that’s shaping up. But Morris writes here: “In its debate over how to change the U.S. immigration system, Washington neglected the impact in Mexico – which faces a crossroads election this summer. And Mexico’s choice could not be more important to the United States. On July 2, the Mexican people will decide whether to elect ultra-leftist Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador (known as AMLO) as their next president. Rumors have abounded for months that Lopez Obrador’s campaign is getting major funding from Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.
“And last month Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz)., a moderate Republican, told several Mexican legislators that he had intelligence reports detailing revealing support from Hugo Chavez to AMLO’s Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD). Chavez is a firm ally of Cuba’s Fidel Castro. Lopez Obrador could be the final piece in their grand plan to bring the United States to its knees before the newly resurgent Latin left. Between them, Venezuela and Mexico export about 4 million barrels of oil each day to the United States, more than one-third of our oil imports. With both countries in the hands of leftist leaders, the opportunity to hold the U.S. hostage will be extraordinary. Think we have security problems now, with Vicente Fox leading Mexico? Just wait until we have a 2,000-mile border with a chum of Chavez and Castro.
“Lopez Obrador is not inevitable. Recent polls show the candidate of Fox’s National Action Party (PAN), Felipe Calderon, closing in. But much will hinge on the resolution of the immigration debate now roiling Congress.” Now, Morris’ point is that if we come up with an immigration policy here that angers the Mexican people and they end up electing this far-leftist wacko Obrador, and he teams up with Chavez, that we will have just strangled ourselves, and he makes another case that we’ve got to be careful. Don’t make ’em mad! Don’t make the Mexican people mad! Don’t start saying things that are going to cause them to backlash against the US by electing a government that will be absolutely horrible for us.
So here we go again: more fear. We got Al-Qaeda strangling us over there, we’ve got Iran working to nuke us, we’ve got the Chinese, the ChiComs working to nuke us, we’ve got the North Koreans and now we’ve got Hugo Chavez and Obrador. Oh, no! What are we going to do? Let me tell you. Let me give you the real analysis of the way to look at this. This whole business of this upcoming election in Mexico on July 2nd should underscore the urgency of the need to reform the corrupt government of Mexico and its status and corrupt economy. The point being that 40% of their people are poor and exporting their poor to our country and our helping them to do it will not reform that country.
It will keep the same elites in office or attract the very kind of leftist government that we fear. I mean, our effort, rather than not making people mad, and not standing up for our own principles, our effort should be on helping the Mexican government create governmental and business practices worthy of a democracy. These people are swimming in oil down there, and so many of their people are dead poor — and somehow this is going to end up being our fault. Our current refusal to enforce our immigration policies, taking on the responsibility of subsidizing millions and millions of Mexican citizens has enabled Vicente Fox and others to avoid the kind of systematic reforms their system needs. I mean, you could look at it this way.
You could look at it with all of the Mexicans that we’ve allowed to come here illegally, and let’s say the number is 20 million. I’ve heard it anywhere from seven to 11 to 12 to 20 million. We may have actually by doing so staved off a Mexican revolution, a revolution that maybe should have happened. But we’ve helped stave it off. What we’re doing by allowing Vicente Fox and the Mexican government to continue to have a corrupt government and an economic system here with a country swimming in oil where 40% of the people are just dead poor. This is not compassionate, what we’re doing, because it’s resulted in tens of millions of Mexicans, in Mexico, remaining dirt poor. We gotta deal with the root cause of the problem here. Now, some people say the root cause of the problem is the border and its insecurity, and our insecure status and so forth.
Yeah, that’s true, but there’s also something else at the root as well, and that is economic circumstances are such in Mexico that this many people want out of the place, and they come here. Now they’ve acquired magical status as future swing voters. Believe me, that’s how they’re being looked at, not just voters, but swing voters, and so they’ve become attractive to politicians. If we really wanted to help Mexico, we’d help them create a rule of law that they’ll follow and an economic system that expands wealth creation across the board. I’ll tell you, this is where some of our elite Republicans are going wrong. They’re buying into the left-wing and ethnic lobby propaganda. They’re running scared. They’re surrendering the field, rather than sticking with first principles that work whether we’re dealing with a communist state like the old Soviet Union or a failed government and economy like Mexico now has. That’s what I mentioned earlier. We’re abandoning our principles in order to try to get a stake here in this future number, whatever it is, of swing voters.
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RUSH: Let’s think through this logically. This is the way it is right now. Only by coming to the US illegally do you get to continue to work here while preparing for eventual citizenship.
You know, Congress has the power. I just love when they act like they’re innocent bystanders to the creation of the problem, and they come riding to the rescue every 20 years to solve it, when they’ve created it. We gave you the news</a> last week about Senator Kennedy and an immigration bill in 1965 in which he promised that virtually everything that has happened would not happen, and now he’s a leader with McCain in the Senate reform effort. Reform, my rear end! Congress has the power to increase legal limits of immigration, but it’s nothing to do with right and wrong. It’s a straw man. Even if we stipulate that a guest worker program helps to deal with people who are here illegally, how does that help stem the flow of future illegals? It does just the opposite. It’s going to increase it.
We’re going to have exactly the same problem we have now in the years ahead. When you legalize what is illegal, you are said to be courageous and compassionate, yet the root problem in Mexico isn’t addressed. The illegal influx continues, and the politics of this has to make you laugh. It cracks me up. It probably makes you laugh, too. They argue that we need to attract this vote. You know the best vote, the highest Hispanic vote total George W. Bush ever got, was about 44% when he ran for governor of Texas. So if we continue to get a smaller percentage of the vote by a growing community in this country, will we win elections? We ought to be talking about taking our principles to all people regardless of race or religion and win the day with those arguments, not by pandering and embracing illegal behavior.
You’ve got some elites in Washington who are just hell-bent on this election angle, and they’re worried that too much focus on keeping the illegal immigrants out of the country will make the Republican Party a minority party for the long term — and they call people like me “nativists.” Yeah nativists, xenophobes, racists, what have you. I mean, it’s quite interesting. But what good is being a Republican or a conservative if you’re going to throw it all out in order to attract certain votes from people who have grown up and been weaned on an entitlement mentality and expect that? And if somebody offers it, they’re going to vote for it. So are we going to get in a competition with the left to see who can offer the biggest welfare state in order to get this swing vote of future Hispanics?
If we keep having more and more of them come into the country but we keep getting less and less of them to vote for us, how this accomplishing anything politically? At the same time, we’re dumping our own conservative principles all over the place in order to secure whatever percentage of this swing vote. It’s just fear out there, folks. Yeah, I’m sure I’ll be accused of destroying the Republican Party. I know they’re saying it. They’re saying it about a lot of us here who have this position. In fact, “talk radio” is. You know, I well understand that I am talk radio, but I’m not all of talk radio. I have become the generic word. I’m like “Xerox” means a “copy machine.” I mean, talk radio, when the left and the media talk about it. But how many times do I part ways with the so-called right-wing-talk radio bunch? Quite a few times. So when you hear talk radio is doing this or that and the other thing, understand what it is. It is an effort to discredit not just me, but everybody that does it. But we’re not monolithic, and they are attempting to make all of talk radio be the same thing, and as you people who well know, who listen to the program regularly, such is not the case.
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