Advertisement

Mean-spirited foes of illegal immigration pushed to the side

By CYNTHIA TUCKER|February 11, 2008

So much for Tancredoism.

Tom Tancredo is the Colorado congressman who ran for the Republican presidential nomination on a simple platform of nativism and undisguised contempt for illegal immigrants. Since his ill-tempered and simplistic views reflected the sentiments of the hard-core Republican base, several other members of the GOP field adopted a similar mean-spirited rhetoric.

As Rudolph W. Giuliani and Mitt Romney - onetime Republican hopefuls with moderate records on illegal immigration - tacked toward Know-Nothingism, Arizona Sen. John McCain stood largely apart, resisting the impulse to blame illegal immigrants for everything from terrorism to high taxes. As his signature legislation to legalize undocumented workers was routinely excoriated as "amnesty" by conservative talk-show hosts and right-wing bloggers, Mr. McCain barely budged.


Advertisement

In November, during a Republican debate in St. Petersburg, Fla., his GOP rivals worked to prove their anti-illegal-immigration bona fides, citing their support for such dubious measures as high fences and hot pursuit of Mexican landscapers.

A clearly unenthusiastic Mr. McCain pledged to tighten the borders but declined to ratchet up his rhetoric. "We must recognize these are God's children as well," he said. "They need our love and compassion, and I want to ensure that I will enforce the borders first. But we won't demagogue it."

Now, Mr. McCain is the likely Republican nominee. Among the losers in last Tuesday's mega-primary was the Tancredo Credo, which placed illegal immigrants at the center of every peril and every problem facing the American voter. With both remaining Democrats - Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama - having voted for comprehensive immigration reform, there is little chance the Oval Office will be occupied by an anti-illegal-immigration mossback.

Illegal immigration remains a complex and nettlesome issue, requiring a thoughtful and measured response. That, by the way, was represented by the McCain-Kennedy comprehensive reform bill, which failed when Republicans, despite support from President Bush, refused to vote for it.

While illegal immigrants burden the social infrastructure - schools, hospitals and housing - they also revitalize many neighborhoods as they open new businesses and buy additional goods and services.

Baltimore Sun Articles
|