More Gibberish from Newt: NRO
The below from our pal Mark Krikorian: I think he is too kind to Gingrich.
National Review Online
More Gibberish from Newt
December 19, 2011
By Mark Krikorian
On Face the Nation yesterday, Gingrich made clear that he wants to amnesty all illegal aliens, not just church-going grandmothers who wash the feet of the poor and knit socks for our troops in Afghanistan to help them kill the enemies of America. As he sees it, the bulk of illegals would get amnestied through his guestworker program: âMy guess is that 7 or 8 or 9 million of them would ultimately go home, get a guest-worker permit, come back under the law.â This is the same âtouchbackâ gimmick that amnesty backers have been pushing for years â illegal aliens cross over to Tijuana, have lunch, pick up their papers, and come back in the afternoon as newly christened legal workers. In the Fifties official government documents called this âdrying out the wetbacksâ (really) and thereâs no way to describe it other than amnesty.
The others? âBut the last million or 2 are people that have been here for a very long time. Theyâre very part of â theyâre not citizens, but theyâre part of the community. One of the requirements would be that they would have to have an American family sponsor them to be eligible for review by the citizen review board.â I guess the difference here is that the 7â9 million getting guestworker visas would have a temporary nonimmigrant status (a ânonimmigrantâ is any foreigner legally here in a status that doesnât lead to eligibility for citizenship), whereas the people who got the nod from the citizen review boards would get a permanent nonimmigrant status. Except that the âtemporaryâ guestworkers would have to be able to indefinitely renew their status â otherwise, weâd have to undertake the âinhumaneâ task of deporting them, right? So thereâs really no difference between his two groups of illegals.
Also, no one would be rejected by the review boards because youâd just find an SEIU official in Berkeley or Madison or Cambridge to sponsor you, regardless of where you really lived, and the panels themselves would be staffed by ACLU members and La Raza activists. (East L.A. alone would rubber-stamp 2 million amnesty applications.) But if anyone were rejected, why wouldnât they just go and get one of the âtemporaryâ guestworker visas? Gingrich may know what heâs talking about with regard to space mirrors or polar bears, but he has obviously not given two seconds of sustained thought to immigration.
Kris Kobach does know something about immigration, and his piece in the current âMarvin the Martianâ issue of NRoDT (you should subscribe) raises another important point about the review board idea. Gingrich compares his panels sometimes to draft boards and other times to juries; but juries can only decide matters of fact, not law, whereas these boards would have to do both:
Or, to put it differently, a jury decides the narrow factual question, âDid he do it?â But Newtâs amnesty panel would decide the legal questions, âWhich immigration laws did he violate?â (and inquiry that involves both law and facts) and âDid he violate those laws in such a way that we are inclined to forgive the violations?â These inquiries are vastly more complex and subjective â and likely would result in different panelsâ treating similarly situated aliens unequally.
Finally, the very premise of Gingrichâs plan is false. He contends that very long-term, âotherwise law-abidingâ illegal aliens with American dependents have no recourse if theyâre picked up by immigration authorities. But, as I pointed out in a recent Philadelphia Inquirer piece, there are already ways of legalizing certain illegal aliens with compelling cases, and there are changes that could be made to, for instance, increase the discretion of immigration judges to legalize such people. What we donât need is new government programs which would serve as fraud factories and open the doors to unlimited future immigration.