Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Robert David SullivanApril 08, 2014

Jeb Bush, the son and brother of separate presidents who may get the Republican nomination in 2016 because he’s folksier than Mitt Romney, made some controversial remarks about immigrants during an interview with Fox News on Sunday. Implicitly criticizing the Tea Party wing of the GOP, he said that undocumented immigrants who have come to the United States should not be treated as felons. From Politico:

“It’s an act of love. It’s an act of commitment to your family,” Bush said. “I honestly think that that is a different kind of crime. There should be a price paid, but it shouldn’t rile people up that people are actually coming to this country to provide for their families.”

Bush presumably agrees with Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus that Romney’s idea of making life miserable for undocumented immigrants so they “self-deport” was “horrific,” at least in terms of political strategy.

After Romney lost in 2012, it was briefly conventional wisdom that congressional Republicans would need to work with President Barack Obama to pass immigration reform and improve the party’s terrible image among Hispanic and non-white voters. But that argument has lost steam, perhaps because the different turnout dynamics of midterm elections mean that the Republicans are likely to win big in 2014 on the basis of older white voters.

House Speaker John Boehner (from the least productive Congress in modern memory) went to Fox on Monday to shoot down any idea that Bush’s interview was a sign of progress on immigration reform. He told Megyn Kelly that Obama’s efforts to “ignore the law” regarding the Affordable Care Act (i.e., making changes to the ACA in response to implementation problems) has killed any chance of bipartisanship: “That will make it almost impossible to ever do immigration reform because he will spoil the well to the point where no one will trust him by giving him a new law that he will implement it the way the Congress intended.”

So nothing has changed since last October, when Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, who was supposed to be a rising star capable of bringing Hispanic votes to the GOP, reversed his support for immigration reform on the grounds that Obama was too sneaky to work with. Salon’s Brian Beutler wrote then about “the consequence of Boehner’s decision to let conservative hard-liners kill comprehensive reform”:

Some of these members are motivated more by spite than by the sum of their concern for the national welfare, the interests of their constituents, and their own partisan allegiances. Others oppose reform more earnestly. But together they comprise a faction that’s pulling the Republican Party in a whites-only direction. Rubio’s latest move suggests they’ve won the tug of war.

More recently, the American Conservative’s Scott Galupo wrote that the tension between the presidential Republican Party and the more conservative congressional Republican Party will only get worse after this fall:

If and when Republicans retake the Senate, the intraparty feud, now simmering, will begin to boil anew. The rightmost flank, flush with victory, will need to be appeased. And the ideological toxicity; the demographics of death; the lack of a viable national standard-bearer — these factors and others will conspire to elect the next President Clinton.

BTW, Galupo’s link is to a CNN story headlined “GOP problem: 'Their voters are white, aging and dying off.'"

Photo: Immigrant Isabel Rivera from the Dominican Republic takes the oath of citizenship during a 2013 naturalization ceremony in New York. (CNS photo/Brendan McDermid, Reuters)

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
Marie Rehbein
10 years 8 months ago
Some people may recall that one of George W. Bush's failed efforts was to establish a guest worker program to address the both the problem of people coming across the border illegally and the problem of farmers not being able to find enough domestic labor to harvest their crops. My sons' university newspaper is running an ad from a farm in Texas that is looking for people to help harvest crops in the summer (over 100 degrees there then) -- must be able to toss 25lb watermelons into trucks, repeatedly. Not too many college students I know would be able to handle that type of grueling work for long.

The latest from america

In this episode of Inside the Vatican, Colleen Dulle and Gerard O’Connell discuss the 2025 Jubilee Year, beginning on Christmas Eve 2024 and ending in January 2026.
Inside the VaticanDecember 26, 2024
Pope Francis gives his Christmas blessing "urbi et orbi" (to the city and the world) from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican Dec. 25, 2024. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)
Pope Francis prayed that the Jubilee Year may become “a season of hope” and reconciliation in a world at war and suffering humanitarian crises as he opened the Holy Door in St. Peter’s Basilica on Christmas Eve.
Gerard O’ConnellDecember 25, 2024
Pope Francis, after opening the Holy Door of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican, gives his homily during the Christmas Mass at Night Dec. 24, 2024. (CNS photo/Lola Gomez)
‘If God can visit us, even when our hearts seem like a lowly manger, we can truly say: Hope is not dead; hope is alive and it embraces our lives forever!’
Pope FrancisDecember 24, 2024
Inspired by his friend and mentor Henri Nouwen, Metropolitan Borys Gudziak, leader of Ukrainian Catholics in the U.S., invites listeners in his Christmas Eve homily to approach the manger with renewed awe and openness.
PreachDecember 23, 2024