Fred Thompson on amnesty
Fred Thompson on amnesty TownHall.com
Most Americans know that we have an illegal immigration problem in this country, with perhaps as many as 20 million people residing here unlawfully. And I think most Americans have a pretty good idea about how to at least start solving the problem ā secure our nationās borders.
But thereās an old saying in Washington that, in dealing with any tough issue, half the politicians hope that citizens donāt understand it while the other half fear that people actually do. This kind of thinking was apparent with the ācomprehensiveā immigration reform bill that the U.S. Senate and the White House negotiated yesterday.
Senator Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., seated, and others, takes part in a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, May 17, 2007, to discuss immigration reform legislation. Standing, from left are, Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez, Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., and Sen. Johnny Isakson, R-Ga. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook) Iād tell you what was in the legislation, but 24 hours after the politicians agreed the bill looked good, the Senate lawyers were still writing what may turn out to be a one thousand page document. In fact, a final version of the bill most likely will not be made available to the public until after the legislation is passed. That may come five days from now. Thatās like trying to digest an eight-course meal on a fifteen-minute lunch break.
Weāve tried the ācomprehensiveā route before to solve the illegal immigration problem with a bit more care and deliberation, and the results havenāt been good. Back in May 1985, Congress promised us that it would come up with a comprehensive plan to solve the problem of illegal immigration and our porous borders. Eighteen months later, in November 1986, that comprehensive plan was signed into law.
Twenty-two years and millions of illegal immigrants later, that comprehensive plan hasnāt done what most Americans wanted it to do — secure Americaās borders. Now Washington says the new ācomprehensiveā plan will solve the problem that the last comprehensive plan didnāt.
The fact is our border and immigration systems are still badly broken. We were reminded of this when Newsweek reported that the family of three of the men, arrested last week for allegedly plotting to kill American military personnel at Fort Dix, New Jersey, entered the U.S. illegally more than 20 years ago; filed for asylum back in 1989, but fell off the governmentās radar screen when federal bureaucrats essentially lost track of the paperwork. Wonder how many times thatās been replicated?
Is it any wonder that a lot of folks today feel like theyāre being sold a phony bill of goods on border security? A ācomprehensiveā plan doesnāt mean much if the government canāt accomplish one of its most basic responsibilities for its citizens — securing its borders. A nation without secure borders will not long be a sovereign nation.
No matter how much lipstick Washington tries to slap onto this legislative pig, itās not going to win any beauty contests. In fact, given Congressās track record, the bill will probably get a lot uglier — at least from the publicās point of view. And agreeing to policies before actually seeing what the policies are is a heck of a way to do business.
We should scrap this ācomprehensiveā immigration bill and the whole debate until the government can show the American people that we have secured the borders — or at least made great headway. That would give proponents of the bill a chance to explain why putting illegals in a more favorable position than those who play by the rules is not really amnesty.
Fred Thompson is an actor and former Senator. His radio commentary airs on the ABC Radio Network and be blogs on The Fred Thompson Report.