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October 20, 2006
Amnesty
by Executive Order? Don’t Count It Out
By Joe
Guzzardi
Two
competing schools of thought about what will happen regarding
amnesty post the November 6th elections:
- The
Democrats, as widely predicted, take control of the
House and (nogoodniks
that they are) will pave the way for the Senate to pass a
massive amnesty/guest
worker program.
- The
Republicans mount a mighty comeback and hold on to the
House, although by the narrowest margin. But, nogoodniks
that they are, in a back room deal, the newly re-elected
Congressmen work out an amnesty deal with the Senate that is
billed a "compromise"
but that is, in reality,
a sell-out.
From my
perspective, fretting about which party may be the biggest Bush
amnesty-enabler is wasted energy. Immigration is too much of a
political
hot potato for either side to want to get too close to it.
But an
amnesty may well lie in our future. And if it does, it will
not be brought to us compliments of the Democrats or the
Republicans.
I see
ahead the possibility of amnesty fashioned by a George W. Bush
Executive Order.
Evil
things are brewing. Bush has fought for
amnesty since his first day in office. He has been thwarted
at every turn. But when someone as obstinate as Bush is denied
what he most wants, don’t expect him to roll over. Remember how
badly he wanted his Iraqi war.
Will Bush
play his Executive Order trump card to get what he so
desperately yearns for? Will Bush, in a cut-and-run move at
the end of his term, ignore the Constitution and grant amnesty
to millions?
What does
Bush care about the Constitution anyway?
Plenty of
signs indicate that Bush might sign an
Executive Order…and that he thinks he can get away with it.
Review
his record of signing statements wherein Bush has ignored entire
sections of legislation including provisions that were
negotiated with Congress. [
Bush
Challenges Hundreds of Laws, By Charlie Savage,
Boston Globe, April 30, 2006]
Conveniently for Bush, he can claim that an Executive Order for
illegal aliens strengthens national security.
Taking
his cue from
La Raza, Bush could maintain that America during the War on
Terror is best served when all its residents are known and
identifiable. A
green card, a valid
social security card and ultimately citizenship, Bush would
argue, are the key steps to maximizing our protections against
our enemies.
Bush has
already said as much in his
nationally televised (and nationally ignored) May 6th
speech about immigration:
"Once here, illegal immigrants live
in the
shadows of our society. Many use forged documents to get
jobs, and that makes it difficult for employers to verify that
the workers they hire are legal."
Further defending an Executive Order, Bush could replay his "we
are a
nation of immigrants"
theme, one of his well-worn favorites.
From Bush’s March 25 White House
radio address (and
dozens of other public statements):
"…Millions
who've come to our shores seeking
liberty and
opportunity, and America is better off for their hard work
and
love of freedom. America is a nation of immigrants."
The most probable scenario however is that Bush wouldn’t so much defend
his decision for an Executive Order as he would simply to defer
to the
"higher power" who guides him.
From Bush’s June 2006
National Hispanic Prayer Breakfast address:
"I've
also said, from my personal perspective, I rely upon the
Almighty for strength and comfort. The daily example of our
Hispanic communities reminds us that strong faith and strong
families can build a better future for all. We’re a more hopeful
society because men and women of Hispanic descent have put their
faith and values into action… It is important for us in this
important debate on immigration to remember that we've always
been a hopeful nation. We are a land of immigrants. We’re a
compassionate people."
Arguing against Bush when he reminds us of his special link with the
Almighty is tough…like punching at air.
Now, before you go and jump off a bridge about the possibility of an
Executive Order, remember that my opinion merely represents the
ramblings of a lone columnist toiling in the obscurity of
California’s San Joaquin Valley.
Others—better versed and more scholarly than me—strongly disagree.
A New York lawyer,
Henry Lenoir, has said that an Executive Order legalizing
illegal aliens would be a distortion of the presidential power
to pardon.
As Lenoir concluded:
"After all, illegal though they
are, illegal aliens haven’t been federally convicted of
illegal entry and residence, so there is nothing he can
pardon."
But since January 29, 2001 Bush has signed hundreds of
Executive Orders…most having nothing to do with pardons.
Ominously for us, the first in 2001 created one another of Bush’s pet
projects that didn’t have much national or Congressional
support, a
White House Office of Faith Based and Community Initiatives.
And, more storm clouds above us, in June 2006, Bush created the
Task Force on New Americans.
Two years—a political eternity— is left on Bush’s second term. Anything,
good or bad, can happen.
But forewarned is forearmed.
Republican leaders who care about
the future of their party—a group that
does not include Bush—should be aware of the possibility
that with a single stroke of the president’s pen, the GOP could
be
destroyed.
Joe Guzzardi [
e-mail
him] is the Editor of VDARE.COM Letters to the Editor.
In addition, he is an English teacher at the Lodi Adult School and has
been writing
a weekly newspaper column since 1988. This column is exclusive
to
VDARE.COM. |