AP
By Kathleen Ronayne
March 9, 2015
Sen.
Lindsey Graham isn't shy about engaging with Republican primary voters
on his support for a path to legal status for people in the country
illegally, despite the
ire that position draws from many conservatives key to a presidential
nomination.
While
visiting the early voting state of New Hampshire on Monday, the South
Carolina senator said Republicans need to work with Democrats to craft a
plan that secures
the border and creates a path to legal status for the 11 million people
who are living in the U.S. illegally. He says asking those people to
leave on their own is not realistic.
"I've got one goal: Fix this permanently," Graham told a voter who asked for his stance on the issue.
"Our
beloved Ronald Reagan gave 3 million people amnesty and they did not
secure the border, they did not increase legal immigration or change how
you control who gets
a job," he said. "If you don't do those three things, you will have
wave after wave after wave, but if you do these things right that will
be the end of illegal immigration."
Graham's
10-minute answer came after he delivered remarks to a business-oriented
audience on the threat of the Islamic State and the need for
overhauling entitlements.
Immigration
has become a sticky subject for Senate Republicans who backed an
overhaul bill and is likely to become a divisive issue in the Republican
presidential primary.
In Iowa this weekend, both Graham and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush said
people already here should have a path toward legal status. Both are
weighing a presidential bid.
The senator said he does not fear the repercussions of sharing his immigration views in a Republican primary.
"All
I can say is that we need to fix immigration — it's a national security
issue, it's a cultural issue and it's an economic issue," he told
reporters. "I am not going
to give an inch on the idea."
Graham
said Republicans won't get enough support to secure the border and
overhaul the legal immigration system if they don't also consider
creating legal status for the
people who are already here illegally, he said. Calling Hispanics "the
most patriotic people I've ever met," Graham said self-deportation is
not a realistic or fair option.
He
outlined a fictional scenario of a young Hispanic-American man who
joins the U.S. military and returns from duty to learn his grandmother
is being asked to leave the
country.
"He's
probably going to have a hard time listening to my economic plan for
revitalizing America if he believes I'm the guy that wants his
grandmother to walk back to Mexico,"
Graham said.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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