That GOP Debate In New Hampshire: A Pleasant Surprise On Immigration
Rob Sanchez has a powerful post this morning about Gov. Tim Pawlenty's Chamber of Commerce-compliant immigration policy, but I am astonished to say I don't really agree with Rob's dismissal of the immigration component in last night's GOP presidential debate as "superficial".
The transcript is here (I'm excerpting the relevant portion here); a YouTube excerpt is here.
Of course, it's scandalous and stupid that none of the candidates called for 1) an anti-unemployment immigration moratorium; 2) a comprehensive anti-illegal immigration policy comprising a) a sealed border to stop the illegal flow b) elimination of the illegal stock by increased deportation, attrition through enforcement, overthrow of Plyler v. Doe, abolition of birthright citizenship etc.
But short of that, and setting aside all the claptrap about "compassion" and immigrant forebears that American pols seem to feel necessary, the candidates were surprisingly firm—certainly firmer than the moderator, CNN's John King, seemed to want or expect.
This can only be a tribute to the terror inspired in the candidates by New Hampshire's patriotic peasantry—and, we like to think, to the pitchforks that VDARE.com and others in the movement have been stockpiling for them all these years.
Highlights:
-
Herman Cain endorsed abolition of
Birthright Citizenship—he said "I don't believe
so" when asked if the "Anchor Baby"
loophole should exist.
-
Cain also endorsed Arizona-style
state action to eliminate the illegal stock, as did
Pawlenty (!) and Santorum. (I think: he said:
"the federal government should
not require states to provide
government services".)
-
Santorum also said "We should
not be offering to people—particularly those who
broke the law to come here or
overstayed their visa—we should not be
offering government benefits". I presume this
was a mis-statement, but on its face it seems to
show an awareness that government transfer payments
are a
problem for legal immigration policy too—in
Milton Friedman's famous formulation:
-
Both Paul and
Gingrich contrasted deficient border security with
the effort made in Iraq and Iran. As Paul put it:
"We should
think about protecting our borders, rather than the
borders between Iraq
and Afghanistan".
That may not seem much—but both were interrupted
with applause.
Politicians notice applause. Out on the
campaign trail, it can end up making policy.
-
Gingrich and
Pawlenty endorsed using the
National Guard
on the
Mexican border;
in fact, Pawlenty congratulated himself on sending
the
Minnesota National Guard.
-
Ron Paul
heroically responded to King's tendentious question
on Emergency Rooms ("A
5-year-old child of an illegal immigrant walks into
an emergency room. Does the child get care?") by
essentially saying no ("Well,
first off,
we shouldn't have the mandates.
We bankrupted the
hospitals
and the
schools in Texas
and other states. We shouldn't give them easy
citizenship").
Without prompting, Paul even went on to imply that,
despite
recent ominous signs,
he's cool on amnesty ("We
shouldn't give them easy citizenship")
-
Gingrich
similarly refused to be trapped on amnesty:
"No serious
citizen who's concerned about solving this problem
should get
trapped into a yes/no answer
in which you're either for totally selling out
protecting America or you're
for totally kicking out 20 million people
in a heartless way. There are—there are humane,
practical steps to solve this problem, if we can get
the politicians and the news media to just deal with
it honestly."
This implies awareness of the policy option
always omitted
in immigration enthusiast
pollaganda:
attrition through enforcement.
-
Pawlenty
even showed awareness that anchor-baby Birthright
Citizenship is a
judicial interpretation,
not a constitutional provision:
"That result
is because a U.S. Supreme Court determined that that
right exists, notwithstanding language in the
Constitution." In contrast, four years ago
John McCain
tried (unsuccessfully) to fool voters into thinking
Birthright Citizenship
was somehow blessed by the Founding Fathers.
(Mitt Romney and
Michele Bachmann were not called upon in this exchange,
and did not feel impelled to refer to immigration at
all. But Romney at least made enough pro-patriot noises
to get
Tom
Tancredo's endorsement
when
Tancredo bowed
out
of the last presidential race. And Beltway immigration
patriots have
real
hopes for Bachmann,
although they've been disappointed before).
Needless to say,
all this and a marked ballot paper could get us amnesty,
or at least a continuation of America's
post-1965 immigration disaster.
But hypocrisy is famously the homage that vice pays to
virtue. And this pandering is the obeisance that GOP
professionals now feel obliged to pay to patriotism.
Put this in
perspective. Note that, in dramatic contrast to the
nightmare reign of the disastrous Dubya,
nobody even mentioned amnesty.
It's not perfect, but it's good.
Click here for relevant portion of debate—key points highlighted.Peter Brimelow (email him) is editor of VDARE.COM and author of the much-denounced Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's Immigration Disaster, (Random House - 1995) and The Worm in the Apple (HarperCollins - 2003)