On Immigration, Bush's
"Compassionate" Conservatism vs. "Doctrinaire" "Hard-Liners"
Since 05-29-06
From: Times Watch Tracker [mailto:tracker@mail.timeswatch.org]
Sent: Friday, May 26, 2006 12:25 PM
Subject: Bush, the "Cowboy Commander In Chief"
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TimesWatch
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http://www.timeswatch.org/articles/2006/20060526100211.aspx
Jim Rutenberg nabs a front-page byline on Friday with his news analysis, “G.O.P.
Draws Line in Border,” in which he pits “compassionate” conservatives like Bush
who favor some form of amnesty for illegal immigrants against those
“doctrinaire” meanies who actually want to enforce and strengthen America's
border and immigration laws.
“The negotiations between the White House and Congress that will follow the
Senate's passage on Thursday of an immigration bill could decide not just how
the nation confronts illegal immigration but also what strain of conservatism
the Republican Party carries into the midterm elections and beyond.
“Will it be the compassionate brand Mr. Bush considers crucial to the party's
future, in this case by signaling support for a provision in the Senate bill
that would give most illegal immigrants an opportunity to become legal? Or will
it be the more doctrinaire variety embraced by much of Mr. Bush's party in the
House, one that shuns anything that smacks of amnesty for illegal immigrants and
seeks to criminalize them further?”
The Times again portrays the anti-illegal immigration side as conservative and
quick to anger: “But as of now all indications are that once the negotiators
move from the border security measures that both sides can support to guest
worker and citizenship provisions that conservative House members oppose, they
will hit a wall.
“And it is unclear how much Mr. Bush, with the lowest approval ratings of his
presidency, will be able to prevail upon hard-liners who face tough campaigns
this fall. Though Mr. Bush's allies argue that those most vocally opposed to
anything beyond border security are in the minority of the party -- and indeed
the country -- they matter especially in elections. And they are angry.
Also on Friday, Rachel Swarns reports from Washington that “The Senate easily
passed legislation on Thursday that would give most illegal immigrants a chance
to become American citizens. But the vote did little to soften opposition to the
measure among House conservatives, and Republican leaders acknowledged that
delivering a final bill to President Bush's desk would be enormously difficult.”
Swarns makes three other references to House conservatives in her article, but
finds no liberals. Not even the left-wing Hispanic activist group National
Council of La Raza, whose spokesman is quoted in the story, is called liberal
but is given the glowing term, “Latino civil rights group.”