MSNBC
By Aliyah Frumin
August 31, 2015
It
looks like some Republican presidential candidates are trying to out
trump Donald Trump on immigration, putting forth their own out-there
ideas to secure the nation’s
borders.
New
Jersey Gov. Chris Christie on Saturday proposed tracking immigrants
similar to the way FedEx keeps tabs of its packages. Meanwhile,
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker has
not ruled out building a wall along the far less controversial border
between the U.S. and Canada.
Among
the many GOP 2016 campaigns, Trump, the Republican front-runner, has
managed to steal the spotlight on immigration. The billionaire real
estate mogul wants to build
a 2,000-mile, permanent border wall along the U.S.-Mexico border to
keep out illegal immigrants, put an end to the policy known as
birthright citizenship and methodically arrest and deport more than 11
million illegal immigrants with the hope that the “good
ones” will eventually be let back into the country.
Walker
and Christie’s latest immigration rhetoric seems aimed at
differentiating themselves from the crowded Republican field and gaining
traction on an issue that Trump
is clearly dominating.
“They
can’t figure out how to get their message across given that Trump’s
eating up all of the oxygen … It is attention seeking because they can’t
get attention any other
way,” said Ford O’Connell, a Republican strategist and former John
McCain campaign adviser. “They risk being portrayed as cartoon
characters of themselves.”
According
to an NBC News survey after the first GOP debate earlier this month,
Trump topped the poll with 23% support among Republican primary voters
with Sen. Ted Cruz
in a distant second at 13%. Walker was in the middle of the pack with
7% while Christie pulled just 1% support.
Christie
made his initial remarks about using FedEx technology to track
immigrants during a stop in the early voting state of New Hampshire over
the weekend. “We let people
come to this country with visas and the minute they come in, we lose
track of them,” said the Garden State governor. “So here’s what I’m
going to do as president. I’m going to ask Fred Smith, the founder of
Federal Express to come work for the government for
three months at Immigration and Custom Enforcement and show these
people, because guess what of the 40 million people who are here
illegally, 40% of them didn’t come in over the southern border—40% of
them came here in legally with a visa and overstayed their
visa.”
The
governor, who took some heat over his proposal, said on ”Fox News
Sunday,” “I don’t mean people are packages, so let’s not be ridiculous.”
Still, Christie double-downed
on his idea, arguing “This is once again a situation where the private
sector laps us in the government with the use of technology. We should
bring in the folks from FedEx to use the technology to be able to do
it.”
Christie
isn’t the first Republican politician to pitch using the global
delivery service to address border security issues. Virginia Rep.
Barbara Comstock suggested it
last year when she was running for office and former House Speaker and
failed presidential candidate Newt Gingrich floated the idea of delivery
companies tracking undocumented immigrants in 2011.
Meanwhile,
Walker is setting his sights further north, arguing that building a
wall between the U.S. and Canada is a “legitimate issue.” On NBC’s “Meet
the Press” Sunday,
Walker said that he’s heard concern from people in New Hampshire about
the 5,525 mile long border – the longest in the world.
“They
raised some very legitimate concerns, including some law enforcement
folks that brought that up to me at one of our town hall meetings about a
week and a half ago,”
the Wisconsin governor said. “So that is a legitimate issue for us to
look at.” Notably, Walker– like Trump – has said he’s in favor of ending
birthright citizenship but has since been murkier on the issue.
While some GOP lawmakers, including Sen. John McCain of Arizona have expressed concern that terrorists could cross the Canadian border and into the U.S., they have not gone as far as Walker to suggest the possibility of erecting a wall between the two countries.
While some GOP lawmakers, including Sen. John McCain of Arizona have expressed concern that terrorists could cross the Canadian border and into the U.S., they have not gone as far as Walker to suggest the possibility of erecting a wall between the two countries.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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