Politico
By Jonathan Topaz
November 2, 2014
Mitt
Romney predicted on Sunday that a Republican Senate would break through
congressional gridlock and pass legislation on immigration reform and
trade.
Appearing
on "Fox News Sunday," the former Massachusetts governor and 2012
Republican presidential nominee warned that President Barack Obama would
move after Tuesday's midterm elections toward
"amnesty" on immigration reform, a reference to the White House's
decision to delay executive action on immigration until after the
elections. But Romney said a Republican Congress would pass a more
conservative immigration bill focused on border security
that the president would sign.
“You’re
going to see a provision, first of all, to secure the border," Romney
said. "Second of all, to deal with those who come here illegally. And
third, to make sure our immigration policies
are more open and transparent.
…
That’s going to happen. You’re going to see a bill actually reach the
desk of the president if we finally have someone besides Harry Reid
sitting in the Senate. So, we’re going to get it
done.”
Romney,
who said he anticipates major gains for Republicans but declined to
predict a GOP Senate takeover, said Democrats were chiefly responsible
for the legislative "blockade" in Washington.
A Republican Senate, he said, would put pressure on the White House to
pass trade promotion authority, which the White House and congressional
Republicans largely support but rank-and-file Democrats, led by Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), largely
oppose.
Romney
also said that recent Democratic comments on women's issues and race,
including Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu's comments that Obama's
unpopularity in her state is partly due to race,
show a "desperate" Democratic Party. Those arguments, he said, are
getting "weaker and weaker."
On whether he will run for president in 2016, Romney stuck to his familiar line: “I’m not running. I’m not planning on running."
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