Time
By Alex Altman
April 29, 2015
The GOP presidential hopeful opposes a path to citizenship, but casts himself as a supporter of legal immigration
Texas
Senator and Republican presidential candidate Ted Cruz cast himself as a
supporter of immigration reform on Wednesday, while criticizing
Democrats for killing prospects
of a bipartisan deal by insisting on a pathway to citizenship for
undocumented immigrants.
“I
consider myself a proponent of immigration reform,” Cruz said during a
question-and-answer session in Washington hosted by the U.S. Hispanic
Chamber of Commerce. “There
is no stronger advocate of legal immigration in the U.S. Senate than I
am.”
Cruz
was an outspoken detractor of the bipartisan rewrite of U.S.
immigration laws that passed the Senate in 2013, which in the eyes of
many Republicans would have shored
up the party’s moribund support among Hispanic voters. His comments
offer a telling glimpse of how he will attempt to find a delicate
balance on a pivotal issue during his campaign.
The
GOP presidential hopeful opposes citizenship for undocumented
immigrants, but he stressed Wednesday the need to celebrate and
encourage legal immigration. And he noted
his support for dramatically increasing the available number of
high-tech visas. His remarks drew an implicit contrast with Wisconsin
Governor Scott Walker, a likely rival for the GOP nomination, who
recently took a protectionist stance on legal immigration
levels.
Cruz
declined to directly answer a question from TIME about whether he would
support a path to legal status for undocumented immigrants currently in
the U.S., indicating
a legislative fix should first focus on shoring up border security.
The
freshman Senator said he believed there was significant bipartisan
agreement around securing the borders and streamlining the legal
immigration system. He criticized
Democrats for crippling the recent reform plan in Congress by insisting
on the “poison pill” of citizenship.
“They
are treating immigration as a political cudgel,” Cruz said, “where they
want to use it to scare the Hispanic community. And their objective is
to have the Hispanic
community vote monolithically Democrat.”
Many
Republicans argued Mitt Romney’s hardline position on immigration was
largely to blame for his dismal performance with Latino voters in the
2012 presidential race.
But Cruz said his view—born out by his Senate campaign’s internal
polling—was that Romney had alienated Hispanics with a message that
appeared to denigrate middle-class Americans while venerating the
wealthy.
Cruz
argued that Republicans could win over Hispanics with a message of
economic opportunity, saying Republicans “should be the party of the
47%.”
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