The Hill
By Ben Kamisar
September 21, 2015
Jeb
Bush responded to hecklers chanting “no hope without our vote” on
Monday by reiterating his support for granting a pathway to citizenship
for the children of illegal
immigrants.
The
protest came minutes into the GOP presidential candidate's speech at
the U.S. Hispanic Chamber of Commerce’s national convention.
Bush
addressed the demonstrators directly, sharing a more moderate piece of
his immigration program that has drawn the ire of some conservatives.
“Here’s
what I believe. I believe we need immigration reform. I’ve been clear
about this. I believe that DREAM Act kids should have a path to citizenship,” he said. “I’ll
continue to be consistently for it irrespective of what the political
ramifications of that are.”
Once
the protests died down, Bush continued with a jab at Donald Trump, the
front-runner for the Republican nomination, with whom he’s sparred
repeatedly over immigration.
“If
one of the candidates for president was looking how to make America
great again, just hold up high the examples of Hispanic Latina
successful businesswomen,” he said,
echoing Trump’s campaign slogan.
“That’s what makes America great.”
At
last week’s Republican debate, Trump doubled down on his insistence
that immigrants speak English and refused to apologize for tweeting
about Bush’s Mexican-American
wife.
During
Monday’s speech, Bush needled Trump on both attacks. He noted that his
wife is an “American by choice,” and compared the passion of an
immigrant to that of someone
who converted religions.
“Americans by choice area also pretty fierce about this great country,” he said.
“And
my wife, as an American, just as many people in this room are, the
notion that she’s not, its laughable, its totally laughable.”
Bush
pushed back against the characterization that the GOP is against
immigration reform, noting that the view is only “out of the mainstream
temporarily in my party”
and adding that most Republican voters do back it.
Chiding
Trump’s plan to build a wall across the Southern border, he reiterated
his push for a pathway to legal status for all people in America
illegally.
“That
is the dignified American way, the practical way of solving the problem
of 12 million immigrants. If we did that, we could turn immigration
into what it’s always
been: a sustained economic driver for our country,” he said.
“‘All
you have to be is up and taking nourishment and you see the value of
the immigrant experience in this country, adding a vitality that is
different and unique and
extraordinary.”
The
Hispanic Chamber has sought to make inroads with GOP candidates as
illegal immigration continues to play a major part in the race. The
group’s leader sat down with
White House hopeful Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) for a question-and-answer
session earlier this year and had a private meeting with Trump after his
controversial comments on immigration.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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