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Tuesday, 03 October 2006 |
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Culberson cites threat to homeland security; opponent says making that link is 'disservice' By KRISTEN MACK Copyright 2006 Houston Chronicle U.S. Rep. John Culberson characterized illegal immigration Monday as a threat to homeland security, while a fellow luncheon speaker focused on immigrants' contributions and suggested the link to terrorism has no place in the complex national debate. "The immigration debate has to be defined in terms of the international war on terror. We are engaged in a long, brutal, ugly war with extremists," said Culberson, R-Houston. He said without citing a source that possible terrorists are crossing the U.S.-Mexico border and adopting Spanish surnames. "Our border is undefended and not enforced," Culberson said. "As long as that exists we are under the threat of attack." Immigration lawyer Charles Foster retorted that linking terrorism and immigration is a "disservice to the discussion." "Ninety-nine percent of these people take care of our kids and build our homes," said Foster, who heads the immigration section at the law firm Tindall & Foster, and who was a principal adviser to President Bush on the issue. |
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Tuesday, 03 October 2006 |
By: HARRY ESTEVE Republican Ron Saxton has launched a new TV ad putting illegal immigrants on center stage in the governor's race, saying so many have moved to the state that they now make up "Oregon's second largest city." More are "pouring in," the ad states. The commercial attacks Democratic Gov. Ted Kulongoski for taking a soft line on "illegal aliens" by allowing them to obtain driver's licenses and vote in state elections. The TV spot was panned by migrant rights groups and by Secretary of State Bill Bradbury, who charged Saxton with "spreading false and unverified claims" about illegal immigrants voting in Oregon. "I looked at the past 15 years of general elections," Bradbury said. Of more than 10 million votes cast, only 10 prompted investigation into citizenship, he said, and of those 10, only two were prosecuted. Saxton campaign manger Felix Schein called Bradbury a Democratic partisan, and said it's not surprising that he hasn't found cases of illegal immigrants voting. "If he did, he would be partially at fault." | |
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Friday, 29 September 2006 |
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By S. Mitra Kalita Washington Post Staff Writer
For technology companies and research institutions that have spent recent autumns lobbying for permission to hire more foreign workers, this was supposed to be the year that ended the annual rite of desperation. A bill that passed the Senate this spring would have doubled the number of visas issued every year for highly skilled professionals, such as scientists and engineers. And it would have helped clear a backlog of applications for permanent residency from such workers. But the attempt by Congress to rewrite the nation's immigration laws has bogged down in controversy over border security and illegal immigration. That means changes in the skilled-worker programs, while less controversial, are also in limbo. With Congress due to recess tomorrow, advocates of the programs have given up on winning immediate change. Now they're hoping members of Congress will focus on the issue in the lame-duck session late this year. |
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Wednesday, 27 September 2006 |
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Herndon Town Council Votes to Apply for Federal Training Program By Bill Turque Washington Post Staff Writer The Herndon Town Council voted late last night to apply for a federal program that would train some police officers to enforce U.S. immigration laws, allowing them to hold illegal immigrants so that deportation proceedings could begin. The 6-1 vote, taken shortly before midnight, came after a long evening of sometimes impassioned public testimony about whether the western Fairfax town's small, 50-plus member police department should become involved in an area of law enforcement traditionally left to the federal government. The council's decision authorizes town officials to contact U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to express interest in enrolling some officers in the agency's "287 (g)" program, a provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act. |
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Wednesday, 27 September 2006 |
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Republican leaders in the House and Senate were blocked Tuesday by a senior GOP senator in their efforts to add immigration, handgun and Internet gambling measures to a defense bill. Sen. John Warner, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, rejected appeals from Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist and House Speaker Dennis Hastert to use his bill on military pay raises as a vehicle for their pet measures. Warner said in a memo to Frist he is "firmly opposed" to including unrelated bills in the defense bill. Two other Republicans also oppose the add-on bills, Warner said. Hastert had insisted on adding to the defense bill a measure the House passed last week that would make it easier to detain and deport illegal immigrants who are members of violent criminal street gangs. "Cracking down on gangs might be divisive in San Francisco, but it's not in the rest of America," Hastert said in a reference to House Democratic Leader Nancy Pelosi, who represents the city by the bay. "It's my hope the Senate will live up to its word so that we can send this measure to the president for his signature." |
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