When it comes to abortion rights, Rudy Giuliani can avoid the subject and talk about “strict constructionist” judges. When it comes to gay rights, he can try to find some wiggle room between his previous (read: genuine) beliefs and his new (read: pandering) beliefs.
But when it comes to immigration, Giuliani might find the flip-flop much harder to pull off.
Republican presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani vowed Tuesday to stop the flow of illegal immigrants into the United States by closely tracking visitors to the country and beefing up border security.
“We can end illegal immigration. I promise you, we can end illegal immigration,” the former New York mayor said at a community center [in South Carolina] — the first of the day’s two stops in this early voting state. […]
Rival Mitt Romney has criticized Giuliani on immigration, arguing that he supported illegal immigration when he was mayor — a charge Giuliani rejected.
Romney said last week that Giuliani “instructed city workers not to provide information to the federal government that would allow them to enforce the law. New York City was the poster child for sanctuary cities in the country.”
The tricky part of this, of course, is that Romney happens to be right.
The New York Daily News reported today that Giuliani just borrowed Ed Koch’s immigration policy, and basically embraced ideas that most Republicans in 2007 would find abhorrent.
[As mayor, Giuliani] was considered one of the most immigrant-friendly government executives in the nation — in both word and deed.
He maintained the city’s longstanding immigration policy – begun under Koch and maintained by former Mayor David Dinkins – which guaranteed immigrants access to schools, health care and the police without regard to their status.
“He is repudiating the good things that he did [as mayor], to his shame,” Koch, a frequent critic of Giuliani’s, said yesterday.
Then-Mayor Giuliani also rarely missed a chance to extol the virtues of the immigrants’ struggle.
“Some of the hardest-working and most productive people in this city are undocumented aliens,” Giuliani said in 1994. “If you come here and you work hard and you happen to be in an undocumented status, you’re one of the people who we want in this city.”
Two years later, when asked his view of a Suffolk County bill to make English the official language, he responded, “There’s no reason to pass a bill like this, except maybe to exclude people, insult people or offend people.”
Usually, when listing the reasons Giuliani can’t win the GOP nomination, the first two issues are gays and abortion. They’re immediately followed by guns and his scandalous family life, with his distaste for discussing religion rounding out the top five.
But given the recent political climate, immigration alone could ruin Giuliani’s chances. He’s now trying to move to the right quickly, but unless he’s prepared to denounce everything he said, did, and believed as mayor, it’s yet another high hurdle he’ll struggle to clear.