
Council Of La Raza
Granted Virtual Veto
Over Immigration Bill
From Devvy Kidd
5-19-7
www.Rense.com
- This is beyond an
outrage. I hope people call talk radio this weekend and next
week and really bring down the house on this one.
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- Much of this bill that
hasn't even been read by these craven so and so's in DC was
written by staffers during the night - reported on one of the
cable networks last night.
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- Take it to church. To
the VFW Hall.
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- To the State Houses and
tell them if they would just standup to Washington, DC by
challenging the 17th Amendment and get decent, real U.S.
Senators to DC., we could stop this in the future or we will
have no future and neither will their children.
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- The States of the Union
have NO representation in Congress because of the fraudulent
17th Amendment, but militant an America hating organization Hell
bent on sedition sits in on negotiations to stop this invasion?
These people in Washington, DC have gone literally insane.
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- The first round of
voting by these counterfeit Senators is Monday afternoon. Worst
counterfeit senators who support this amnesty are:
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- Sen. John McCain R-AZ
- Sen. Lindsey Graham
R-SC
- Sen. Jon Kyl R-AZ
- Sen. Arlen Specter R-PA
- Sen. Mel Martinez R-FL
- Rep. Jeff Flake, R-AZ
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- Constituent in those
states need to get your phone trees up and running Monday
morning.
- Thank you.
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INVASION USA
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'La
Raza' Has Virtual Veto Over Bill
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Controversial group 'practically in the room' during
negotiations
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© 2007
WorldNetDaily.com
-
5-18-7
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- Controversial Latino
groups, including the National Council of La Raza, were granted
virtual veto power over the immigration bill hammered out
yesterday by Senate Republicans, Democrats and the White House,
the Washington Post reported.
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- A number of prominent
Republicans have rejected the bill which still has not been
issued in its final form as "amnesty" for millions of people
who came to the U.S. illegally.
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- The National Council of
La Raza, or "The Race," was condemned last year by Rep. Charles
Norwood, R-Ga., as a radical "pro-illegal immigration lobbying
organization that supports racist groups calling for the
secession of the western United States as a Hispanic-only
homeland."
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- Norwood, writing in
Human Events, called on La Raza to renounce its support of the
campus group MEChA Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan
which sees "The Race" as part of a transnational ethnic group
that one day will reclaim Aztlan, the mythical birthplace of the
Aztecs. In Chicano folklore, Aztlan includes California,
Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and parts of Colorado and Texas.
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- As WND reported,
Norwood said last year the National Council of La Raza
campaigned hard against a plan to provide funding, training and
resources for state and local law enforcement agencies who help
federal officers in capturing and detaining criminals who are
illegal aliens.
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- "For those who haven't
figured it out yet, the entire illegal immigration crisis we
suffer is due 100 percent from failure to enforce existing law,"
Norwood said. "The other side (including La Raza) knows this
very well, and knows that the continued suppression of U.S. law
enforcement efforts is essential to permanently destroying our
borders."
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- Regarding the new bill,
Eric Gutierrez, lead lobbyist for the Mexican American Legal
Defense and Educational Fund, or MALDEF, told the Post there's
"a real sense that the Latino community is key to the solution
in this debate, so now they are reaching out to us more than
ever."
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- "Neither party wants to
make a misstep politically," he said.
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- The Post said the
Latino groups "were practically in the room" as Democratic and
Republican senators negotiated the bill, which would grant quick
legal status to millions of illegal immigrants, create a
temporary worker program and increase border security.
-
- Before criticism came
rolling in, Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., insisted the bill is not
"amnesty," but lawmakers such as Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, and
Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., immediately applied that label.
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- King called it "a
pardon and reward for lawbreakers," and DeMint declared, "I
don't care how you try to spin it, this is amnesty."
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- Last year, Latino
groups demonstrated their power by filling streets in cities
across the nation when the House passed a bill that would have
made illegal immigration a felony.
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- The Post noted La Raza,
MALDEF, the League of United Latin American Citizens, or LULAC,
and the National Immigration Forum are part of a broad network
of immigrant rights groups that have been speaking daily with
top aides in the offices of Democratic Sens. Ted Kennedy and
Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader.
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- The bill promoted by
Kennedy would allow illegal immigrants to come forward and
obtain a "Z visa" that puts them on a track for permanent
residency within eight to 13 years. Fees and a fine of $5,000
are required and heads of household first must return to their
home countries.
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- The illegals would be
able to obtain a probationary card right away to live and work
in the U.S., but the path to citizenship cannot begin until
completion of border improvements and the high-tech ID system.
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- The temporary worker
program also would be delayed until the new security measures
are in place. The workers would be required to return home after
two years and would not be on a track for permanent status. The
guest worker visas could be renewed twice, but the worker would
be required to leave for one year between each renewal.
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- Democrats wanted guest
workers to be allowed to stay indefinitely.
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- Two tough issues remain
for which Kennedy's Latino "stakeholders" likely will have sway.
Republicans and Democrats still are divided on whether 400,000
foreigners entering the country as temporary workers would have
to leave the country after three years or be granted a chance to
remain permanently, the Post reported. Also, the parties must
resolve how extended family ties should be weighed in granting
visas.
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- William Ramos, a
spokesman for the National Association of Latino Elected and
Appointed Officials, told the Post his constituency would oppose
elimination of "some aspects of family reunification" and also a
policy that would force immigrants to return to their home
countries for an extended period and to petition for reentry.
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- The White House held a
meeting just over two weeks ago with Latino groups, and Homeland
Security Secretary Michael Chertoff and Commerce Secretary
Carlos M. Gutierrez have had contact.
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- "At least they are
paying attention to us," MALDEF President John Trasviña told the
Post.
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- Members of the "La Raza"
movement envision reclaiming the American Southwest
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http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=55777
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