Bush aims for ‘middle ground,’ but misses everyone

Last night, in his first [tag]Oval Office[/tag] address on domestic public policy, [tag]Bush[/tag] had a few goals in mind. It’s not at all clear he achieved any of them.

President Bush, acknowledging that the nation “has not been in complete control of its [tag]borders[/tag],” said Monday that he would send as many as 6,000 [tag]National Guard[/tag] troops to help secure the border with [tag]Mexico[/tag] and would boost funding to train local authorities to assist in detaining illegal immigrants.

In a rare prime-time address from the Oval Office, Bush sought to build momentum behind a broad overhaul of [tag]immigration[/tag] laws now before [tag]Congress[/tag]. His proposals to tighten border security were aimed at winning support from conservative lawmakers who say the nation’s top concern must be to stop illegal border crossings.

Did the proposals win anyone over? Apparently not.

For one thing, the plan isn’t terribly ambitious. When the White House said it wanted to avoid militarizing the border, it meant it — the 6,000 troops won’t even be seizing illegal immigrants or patrolling the border; they’ll instead help provide logistical support and taking on administrative tasks. Conservatives envisioned Guard troops taking on law-enforcement responsibilities, nabbing those who try to enter the country illegally. That’s not Bush’s plan at all. As the LA Times put it, “[T]he president’s big initiative is heavy on symbolism but will be small in scale — and largely invisible on the ground.”

For that matter, the White House doesn’t even pretend to pay for the $2 billion initiative, which means, like all Bush spending, it just gets added to the national debt.

Border-state [tag]governors[/tag] from both parties don’t think much of the president’s plan, congressional Dems were critical, and [tag]Republicans[/tag] on the Hill seem more than willing to hang Bush out to dry on this.

And then there are the conservative activists, whom Bush hoped to bring back into the fold.

On Monday, for example, conservative talk radio host Rush Limbaugh — normally a loyal surrogate for the Republican cause — used his show to all but ridicule the president’s approach to the issue.

Asserting that Bush was trying to appeal to Latinos at the expense of his political base, Limbaugh dismissed Bush’s plan to dispatch National Guard troops to the border with Mexico as mere “window dressing” that would have little effect on stemming illegal immigration.

“They’ll be down there for a few weeks. They’ll go home,” Limbaugh said, according to a transcript posted on his website. “The border will be open as usual.”

Richard A. Viguerie, a longtime conservative activist, issued a statement Monday denouncing Bush’s “liberal” immigration policies.

“When President Bush says to his supporters, ‘Trust me on immigration,’ he has exhausted his reservoir of good faith with [tag]conservatives[/tag],” Viguerie said. “Americans, especially conservatives, are beginning to tune the president out.”

That’s relatively mild compared to the disappointment expressed by some of the leading farright blogs. Malkin went so far as to say, “Bush has lost touch with reality.”

If the Bush gang expected last night’s address to shore up the base, I think they’re going to be disappointed.

Seems the racists are getting the same treatment as the fundies. They need to learn to be patient with the GOP…

  • Bush’s daddy may have been known as the ‘wimp.’

    But Bush himself should be known as ‘Wimpy.”

    To wit:

    “I will gladly pay you tomorrow for a hamburger today…”

  • “Bush has lost touch with reality.”

    We’ve been saying that for six years!

  • Boy George II’s plan seems to be a bunch of half measures.

    He wants to rotate 6000 guardsmen through the border for two week stints. That may not sound like a lot, but it adds up to tens of thousands of guardsmen over time. This at the same time he is proposing only 210 additional border patrol agents in his 2006 budget.

    He wants legal immigrants to get unforgable ID cards to show their right to work. This kinds of ignores the illegals who use social security card forgeries to work. Since U.S. citizens use social security cards, the illegals can keep on using these easily forged documents without any difficulties.

    His stress on holding companies accountable is a joke. The laws are in place RIGHT NOW to deal with such companies. Boy George II has had years to enforce those laws. He has not given a damn until now.

    Real moderation is not half-assed comprimises between the far left and far right, meeting like a high arching bridge that only touches the ground at the beginning and end and ignores getting suppport from the middle. Unintended consquences arise when laws and policies are made this way, just like the presence of 12,000,000 undocumented immigrants in this country, which was the unintended consequence of writing the 1986 law and then not enforcing the workplace inspection provisions.

  • All the conservatives can think of, on this as on so many other issues, is “cowboys and indians” (straight out of Ronnie Reagan’s movie experience), the same brainless, emotional pit that yielded “the evil empire”: Us good, them bad. It’s very hard for some fruitcakes to think of all the world’s people as “us”.

    The only way to reduce extra-legal immigration into this country is to shut down that which makes such immigration so attractive, i.e., enforce the law, punish those who offer jobs to such people.

    Migrants aren’t stupid. Migration flows are remarkably sensitive to “business conditions”. When the jobs aren’t there, they don’t come. When they are there, they will come, no matter what the obstacles.

    If we do nothing about punishing employers, the only difference when you making safe crossing points harder to use (fences, airplanes, troops) is that the migrants cross at less safe points. Each year of the all-hat cowboy Bush administration, the immigrant death rate goes up, but the flow remains constant – our low paying jobs simply will get filled. Also, when it’s more dangerous to cross the border, immigrants already here are more reluctant to go home to family and friends.

    The reaction of all the officials CB mentioned is appropriate (shows some ability to reason), but I fear the American electorate still hasn’t crossed the cowboy movie barrier to thought. The yahoots probably liked Bush’s speech (we’ll have to wait for reliable polls). I think the best we can hope for (not much) is that this policy with appear to the public the same way “don’t ask, don’t tell” does: that in the end it won’t please anybody very much.

  • I must laugh at attempts to find solutions to human migrations. The Native Americans didn’t meet with much success. The fact is this argument will last only a short time, The face of the voting public will darken as this migration is assimilated. The real problem is how much anger and decisivness is the public going to stand for now and how long will the memories and bitterness last. Some times pay backs are a BITCH!

  • This is going to all boil down to a simple issue, in that the party that can Bash Bush the hardest is the better-qualified to lead the nation. Democrats have known for years that this president (little “p” used intentionally here) is unqualified, lacking in both the intellectuality AND cognitive intelligence required of the office. Republikanners have played him in the role of puppet-prince; a pretty face and kindly voice to promote a bucket of bovine excrement as something not-so-smelly. Now that it’s all falling apart, the puppet-prince will begin playing the final soliloquy—and assume the part of “fall guy” for the Cheney/Rove/Negraponte conglomerate and their insidious allies in the Congress.

    I’d watch, rather closely, just how fast things accelerate towards a complete implosion of this most recent presidency; a presidency that, even to conservatives, has become both a catastrophe, and a joke. The desperate cause of the GOP might now hinge on being more anti-Bush than the Democrats—and it’s quite likely the only way to shed themselves of their addiction to the theocratic demands of Dobson, Falwell, and the other Amerikan Mullahs….

  • As I understand it, the National Guard is for national or state emergencies. The people in the Guard are part-timers and on-call. All these people have jobs and families, but Bush is willing to cut the continuities of their lives for non-emergency issues . He’s disrupting a lot of lives by calling up the Guard every time he needs warm bodies for political purposes. What exactly is different about the border today than it was yesterday. Why is it an emergency today and wasn’t yesterday? I guess it was a political emergency.

  • The immigration crisis is lose/lose for the Republicans because their fragile coalition of the wealthy, fundies, bigots, rednecks and the mindless mad as hell white guys is completely polarized on this issue. The wealthy want all the immigrants they can get to increase the supply of cheap labor and the rest of them hate all non European immigrants with a passion, and don’t want any in this country. How can there be a solution? There can’t be, other than to keep the lid from blowing off on the whole issue, which it has. This is a much tougher problem for the real rulers of America to handle than the fundie crowd and their wish list.

    Kind of fun to watch the Republicans trying to manage their bargains with the devil.

  • “Americans, especially conservatives, are beginning to tune the president out.”

    As pointed out at Kos, the reverse of Ghandi’s dictum is happening, and the above quote represents the final phase. The phases (in reverse, with they/you transposed) are:

    They win
    Then you fear them
    Then you ridicule them
    Then you ignore them

  • Ed is right. The only solution to the problem is enforcing the law and fining the employers who hire illegals. Period.

    Democrats and free thinkers have realized that the W-Cheney puppetry was a joke from the get go and have been pissed off at him. Now, with his immigration speech, Republican’ts and other RightWing zealots are starting to get pissed. On top of it all, W ticked off the suburban soccer moms by pre-empting Oprah’s Legends Ball that she was promoting all week (ABC will run the special next Monday).

    It’s one thing to piss off your enemy, another to piss off your ally, but when you piss off Oprah’s Army…well, let’s just say that Chimpy better find an undisclosed location and lie low for a little while.

  • In addition to enforcing the current law and fining employers, it wouldn’t hurt to have some good trade policy that wasn’t designed to keep Mexico, Central, and South America under the US’s economic thumb.

    Allow those nations to stand on their own and develop and all will prosper.

  • Some things I know about illegal workers in the United States. Most responsible employers can verify a social security number with the SSA; in my last job(Operations Manager in an Arizona Resort) that was a requirement for us to hire someone. If, an illegal does get through with fake documentation, they pay taxes, more than you and me. Their payroll taxes are withheld and go into the general fund, but they never, ever file for a refund. Same with Social Security and Medicare taxes. They pay in but never collect.

    Some things I suspect; all the iniatives proposed last night, fences in the urban corridors, night vision equipment, detection equipment; how many billions of dollars are now going to pour down on the heads of Bush Crony Contractors for work and equipment that will never be delivered, jobs that won’t be completed in our lifetimes, money thrown at the clones of CusterBattles and Brent Wilkes?

    Best outcome is to delay this legislation until after the November Election, and hope for some oversight; otherwise it’s the domestic version of rebuilding Iraq.

  • I’m wondering why this is all of a sudden such an emergency that we have to call in the National Guard?

    Did the illegal border crossings go up recently? It’s so obvious that he’s doing this because there’s an election coming, even Bush’s base of IDIOTS isn’t falling for it. I guess the old adage isn’t true, you can’t fool all of the people some of the time.

    Stick a fork in Bush. He’s done, and I hope he drags his evil party down with him. We need to tie Bush around the neck of every single Republican who’s running for re-election. Find (or make) pictures of them smiling together, and plaster them up everywhere. No caption required.

  • CNN has “Instant Poll” results posted. Here you go:

    In the snap poll of 461 people who watched Monday’s speech, 42 percent said they had a positive opinion of the president’s immigration policies before they heard him speak. Afterward, 67 percent said they had a positive view, a jump of 25 percentage points.

    “People who watch the speech do tend to be somewhat more Republican than the voters as a whole,” said CNN senior political analyst Bill Schneider. “But that wasn’t the best response he’s gotten compared to other speeches, in fact it was lower than any speech we’ve measured since he took office.”

    So apparently the sheeple are meandering toward W’s worthless plan now that he has explained it so that a 6 yeasr old can comprehend it.

    My money says that this will be long forgotten in 2 months and nothing will come of this period (except maybe a few Guardsmen deciding not to re-up since they cannot tell the difference between sitting in the Sonoran Desert and the Arabian Desert–the yboth suck!)

  • The guest worker idea could work if done as follows:
    1. U.S. employers find a suitable employee abroad.
    2. Employer submits application complete with finger prints and a fee of $5,000 or 20% of a years wages whichever is greater.
    3. U.S. issues special visa with fool-proof identification good for 6-12 months with a specific end date.
    4. Worker returns visa when leaving country along with proof of tax payment. Employer gets rebate of 90% of entrance fee.
    5. If worker does not leave by deadline, U.S. has $5,000 to pay for tracking worker down. Maybe a bounty hunter business develops. Employer learns to be more careful in selecting guest workers.
    6. To eliminate loopholes and simplify program, H1B and similar programs are folded into this program.
    7. Congress sets an initial limit on the annual number of special visas. The limit increases depending on a decrease in reliable estimates of illegal immigrants.
    8. Enforce employer sanctions against firms that hire illegals with an iron fist.

  • As usual, the science fiction writers had all this sussed out years ago:

    “The Great Wall of Mexico,” (John Sladek, 1973)

    http://www.scifi.com/scifiction/classics/classics_archive/sladek/

    Some quotes:

    “Why is our corporation government so worried about Mexico?” Chug asked. “Why are they willing to spend more money on building a wall against the Mexican poor than has been spent on the welfare of our own poor in fifty years? Could it be that mere humanity is becoming an embarrassment to our standard oil government?”

    *****
    “I find it fascinating the way reactionaries assume all the bombs and guns are turned against them. Who raises the armies, builds the rockets, buys the bombs, draws the border and declares war, if not your kings and presidents?”

    *****
    “Our ‘Listening Post’ program has been very successful,” he continued. “This means bugging public and private places where we hope dangerous subverts might meet. Originally we had planned to use computers to sort through the vast amount of tape we collected this way. The computers would search for key words like black, power, liberation, revolution, and government, and select these portions for further study.

    “But we have recruited instead a large number of personnel to do this sorting job for us. These recruits are trustworthy, keen listeners, naturally suspicious and absolutely loyal. Best of all, they work for free.”

    The president raised his hand. “Just who are these dedicated personnel?”

    “I was about to explain, sir, that they are elderly people living in retirement homes. As they have little to do, listening gives them pleasure. Many are retired military men, only too glad to still be of service to their country.”

    *****

    It is positively eerie how Sladek foresaw the future, but that’s what good prescient sci-fi is all about.

  • Let’s keep all of the desperate poor south of our borders … and watch the revolutions explode. Maybe this is Bush’s way of bringing freedom to these people, by inciting them to revolt against their governments. Doesn’t he wonder why Latin America is universally turning to the left?

  • JayBee (#16) has a very good idea, make the big corporations and small businesses who hire illegals pay for some of the impact on our infastructure. It used to be that the illegals were comming in to pick crops which is a seasonal job, but now the entire construction industry is dominated by these cheap laborers. Bush said as much when he talked about people who “sling tar on your roof” as some acceptable job for guest workers.

    When we were younger and supporting a family of five, a single paycheck from a construction job paid for everything including our medical bills. These are not jobs that citizens will not do. The construction unions have been eviscerated in most places, and laborers, both legal and illegal, seldom enjoy these wages and benefits. The cost of housing has not gone down at all; rather it has skyrocketed because of the huge influx of immigrant population and the demands on the housing market. The only people who are profiting from the current situation besides the illegals are the employers.

    It all boils down to accountability and it seems to be in short supply.

  • Seeing the Republicans try to distance themselves from Bush is like seeing someone attempting to escape from their own shadow when the bright light of their own rubberstamping record shines on them. Pretty funny, actually. The question is, will the voters by it? Sadly, some will, but for the life of me, I don’t know why.

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