MSNBC
By Amanda Sakuma
August 6, 2015
Immigration
issues dominated the first Republican presidential debate of the
season, pitting GOP candidates against one another in addressing the
millions of undocumented
immigrants with firm roots in the United States.
Looming
over the debate was real estate mogul and billionaire Donald Trump, who
basked in his center podium placement on the debate stage, defying odds
by leading national
polls. Trump claimed credit for making immigration a major campaign
issue after his now infamous speech announcing his candidacy in June,
calling immigrants from Mexico drug dealers and rapists.
“If
it weren’t for me, you wouldn’t even be talking about illegal
immigration,” Trump said. “This was not a subject that was on anybody’s
mind until I brought it up at
my announcement.”
But
even before Trump entered the race, any discussion of immigration
issues has been a minefield for GOP candidates to navigate. Mitt Romney
claimed only 27% of the Latino
vote during the 2012 presidential race, putting Republican prospects in
peril with the fastest growing voting bloc in the country. But in light
of President Obama’s series of executive actions offering a shield from
deportation and temporary legal status to
millions of undocumented immigrants, the swift Republican opposition to
the measures was bound to make immigration a heavily contentious issue
ahead of 2016.
A
major sticking point distinguishing the candidates from one another is
how they plan to address the estimated more than 11 million undocumented
immigrants who currently
live in the United States.
Former
Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who is fluent in Spanish, was put in the hot
seat for steadfastly standing behind a pathway to legalization — notably
not citizenship — with
strings attached and in tandem with tightened enforcement along the
border.
“There should be a path for earned legal status for those who are here,” Bush said. “Not amnesty — earned legal status.”
FOX
News moderator Chris Wallace in fact called out Wisconsin Gov. Scott
Walker for flip-flopping on his position after he previously supported a
clear pathway to legalization,
but later walked back by calling for limitation to even legal
immigration.
Trump
has been portrayed as a divisive figure on immigration — on Thursday he
reiterated that he wanted the Mexican government to foot the bill for
building a border wall.
“We need to build a wall, and it has to be built quickly,” Trump said.
“And I don’t mind having a big beautiful door in that wall so that
people can come into this country legally.”
But
it was Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, the son of Indian immigrants, who
used the most severe rhetoric against immigrants during his closing
statements at the lower-tier
candidate “kids table” forum held prior to the prime-time debate.
“We
must insist on assimilation – immigration without assimilation is an
invasion,” Jindal said. We need to tell folks who want to come here,
they need to come here legally.
They need to learn English, adopt our values, roll up their sleeves and
get to work.”
Texas
Gov. Rick Perry has skirted around the issue on numerous occasions by
insisting that illegal immigration at U.S.-Mexico border must be stopped
entirely before lawmakers
address the millions of people who have roots in the U.S.
“The
border is still porous. Until we have a president of the United States
that gets up and goes to the Oval Office with the intent purpose of
securing the border,” Perry
said.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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