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Bush Immigration Failure Hurts Calderon

 
 
Skye cv
 
Reply Mon 11 Jun, 2007 08:07 am
Well this little vignette by Reuters/ABC left me speechless.... Can anyone read blackmail in this? Now we are holding Mexico hostage because of their inability to keep their citizens in their own nation - and the U.S. is responsible for their economy?


ABC News: Bush immigration failure hurts Mexico's Calderon

Bush immigration failure hurts Mexico's Calderon
By Alistair Bell
Reuters
MEXICO CITY


Washington's failure to change its immigration laws is a blow to pro-U.S. Mexican President Felipe Calderon as he faces his toughest challenges since taking office in December.

After a strong start to his presidency, Calderon is struggling to defeat violent gangs that smuggle drugs across the U.S. border and his government is embroiled in tough talks with Congress to hammer out a tax reform.

Winning a relaxation of U.S. immigration laws has been the main foreign policy goal of Mexico for years and would earn credit for Calderon, a conservative with a Harvard degree who only won last July's election by under a percentage point.

"Resolution, or at least some progress in addressing the immigration issue, would have been a big boost to the government of Mexico," said Peter Hakim, head of the Inter-American Dialogue think tank in Washington.

Republicans and Democrats blocked a U.S. Senate vote last Thursday on a bipartisan bill backed by President George W. Bush that included tougher border security measures and a plan to legalize most of the country's 12 million illegal immigrants.

While some in the U.S. Congress say they will try to revive the bill with Bush's help, others believe the effort is dead and cannot be restarted.

Calderon, praised in Mexico for berating Bush over immigration at talks in March, said on Friday: "It should be deplored how the discussions in the U.S. Senate have not been able to follow a swift course and quickly win approval of this issue."

While not as close to Washington as his predecessor Vicente Fox, Calderon is an advocate of free trade who is seen as a natural ally of Bush against Latin American leftist leaders like Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.

But Mexico, where almost everyone has a friend or relative living in the United States, is upset at Bush's inability to make good on promises to better the lives of the 11 million Mexicans north of the border.

"It's a shame because Mexico has been permanently supporting the United States on security and drug trafficking," said Sen. Jose Luis Lobato, an opposition member of the Mexican Senate's foreign relations committee.

DRUGS, ENERGY

Calderon has sent thousands of troops to fight drug cartels in rural Mexico in a war that should cut the flow of cocaine and marijuana across the border.

But Mexico's narco gunmen have hit back at police and soldiers and Calderon complains Washington has done little to curb demand for illegal drugs in the United States or the flow of U.S. arms to the cartels.

Twenty-three people died in drug violence in one day alone last week and the army is under pressure for the killing of five unarmed civilians are a checkpoint in Sinaloa state.

Apart from the drug war, Calderon's other main push is for economic reforms. A former energy minister, he wants to allow more private companies into Mexico's closed oil sector and U.S. firms would benefit.

But any hint of foreigners taking control of Mexico's oil raises nationalist hackles, even though the government has no plans to privatize state energy monopoly Pemex.

Looser immigration laws in the United States might help Calderon gain an energy reform sought by Washington.

"Those people who want to adjust oil policy in ways that might be helpful to the United States are operating from a far weaker position when the United States is being uncooperative on an issue like immigration," said Hakim.
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 1,033 • Replies: 8
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Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Mon 11 Jun, 2007 09:45 am
@Skye cv,
GW loves everything Mexican. It's a personal thing for him. Nothing wrong with that. So do I. But......we can't merge with Mexico. That's a very dangerous idea. We must maintain the integrity of our borders. That's a fundamental task of any country that wishes to survive and prosper. Border security is non-negotiable. Amnesty, plus a porous border, equal disaster. GW was wrong as heck on his latest bill proposal, and I'm darned glad he lost. Yes, I question the dude's judgment, and I voted for him twice. His judgment is bad on a lot of important stuff.
0 Replies
 
Red cv
 
  1  
Reply Mon 11 Jun, 2007 12:23 pm
@Skye cv,
Quote: Republicans and Democrats blocked a U.S. Senate vote last Thursday on a bipartisan bill backed by President George W. Bush that included tougher border security measures and a plan to legalize most of the country's 12 million illegal immigrants.

So he was willing to allow 12 million illegals to become American and other immigrants have to go through the grueling process of becoming an American. Cough cough, that's just stupidddddddddddddd.
0 Replies
 
Reagaknight
 
  1  
Reply Mon 11 Jun, 2007 07:37 pm
@Skye cv,
I'd like to see someone ask Calderon how his country treats their illegal immigrants.
Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Tue 12 Jun, 2007 09:37 am
@Reagaknight,
Reagaknight;20649 wrote:
I'd like to see someone ask Calderon how his country treats their illegal immigrants.


I once heard that Mexico shoots to kill Guatemalans who try to sneak into Mexico. Wouldn't be surprised if it's true.
:no:
0 Replies
 
92b16vx
 
  1  
Reply Tue 12 Jun, 2007 12:38 pm
@Skye cv,
This bill was just another attempt to smooth the NAU idea over with the American people.
0 Replies
 
socalgolfguy
 
  1  
Reply Tue 12 Jun, 2007 01:14 pm
@Skye cv,
True - Mexico is far more tough on their neighbors to the south than the US is on our neighbors to the south. On the news, I heard of a housekeeper from Guatamala that was beaten and robbed by the Mexican federales on her way here.
0 Replies
 
92b16vx
 
  1  
Reply Tue 12 Jun, 2007 01:32 pm
@Skye cv,
Mexico immigrant policy is absurd compared to ours, along with the "entitlements" you get...

Mexico Mexican Immigration FMT FM2 FM3 Visa Visas
0 Replies
 
Pinochet73
 
  1  
Reply Wed 13 Jun, 2007 10:35 pm
@Skye cv,
No Amnesty!!!!! Not Now, Not Ever!!!!!!
0 Replies
 
 

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