HolyCoast: The Immigration Bill Will Be a Lonely Place for Lindsay Graham
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Saturday, April 24, 2010

The Immigration Bill Will Be a Lonely Place for Lindsay Graham

Right now he's the only Republican supporting it:
Sources familiar with discussions about the issue say the White House is reluctant to move on the politically polarizing and divisive issue of immigration without bipartisan support.

Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina seems to be the only GOP senator on board, but he has told Democrats they will lose his support unless they find another Republican.

Obama called Sen. Scott Brown, R-Massachusetts, to try to get him to sign on, as well as four other GOP senators: Lisa Murkowksi of Alaska, Richard Lugar of Indiana, George Lemieux of Florida and Judd Gregg of New Hampshire.

CNN contacted aides to those senators, and all said none gave the president a commitment to work with Democrats on immigration reform.

Democratic sources say they will probably work to get GOP support for another few weeks and then weigh how to proceed.

One likely scenario, according to the sources, is to craft legislation that has had bipartisan support in the past and try to bring it to the Senate floor in early summer. If they don’t succeed, Democratic sources say, they will at least be able to show key political constituencies like Latinos that they tried.

The last major immigration reform efforts in Congress came in 2005, when Sens. John McCain, R-Arizona, and Ted Kennedy, Brown’s predecessor, introduced a bipartisan bill that aimed to implement guest-worker programs and ways for more illegal immigrants to become citizens.

The McCain-Kennedy bill, however, never came up for a vote in the Senate.
Immigration is the next patch of quicksand the Democrats seem intent on stepping in, and right now Lindsay Graham is trying to help them jump over it. It's a potential disaster for the country, and a potential disaster for the GOP if they sign on and help this thing pass.  As Powerline pointed out, every time President Bush talked about immigration his approval numbers went down.

Kill it, and kill it now.

1 comment:

Larry Sheldon said...

What evidence have you that he is a Republican? Please present only facts derived from his words and actions, not his registration data.