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Tancredo Plots Anti-Immigration 2008 Campaign
New York Sun ^ | November 22, 2005 | MEGHAN CLYNE

Posted on 11/22/2005 12:28:26 PM PST by Icelander

WASHINGTON - As Republicans look to the 2008 primaries in search of a candidate whose credentials and personality can triumph over Senator Clinton, one potential candidate has no expectation of winning on the basis of his personality or record - or of winning at all, for that matter. Instead, Rep. Thomas Tancredo, a Republican of Colorado, is hoping that his participation in Iowa's caucuses and early primaries will bring a victory for his signature issue: immigration reform.

He isn't waiting until 2008. Mr. Tancredo, 59, who has earned a national reputation for being an advocate for stricter border controls on Capitol Hill, has yet to make a firm declaration of his candidacy. But he is already making campaign stops from coast to coast and writing a book about immigration, tentatively titled "In Mortal Danger." It could serve as Mr. Tancredo's campaign platform and will be available in June, the congressman told The New York Sun yesterday.

In addition to laying the groundwork for his own bid, Mr. Tancredo is headlining campaign events for others who share his immigration philosophy. Reached yesterday by phone in Orange County, Calif., Mr. Tancredo was campaigning for the founder of the Minuteman Project, James Gilchrist, who is running for the congressional seat vacated by the new chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, Christopher Cox.

Mr. Tancredo has also visited New Hampshire and South Carolina. Bay Buchanan, who is the sister and adviser of another opponent of illegal immigration and former presidential candidate, Patrick Buchanan, has helped Mr. Tancredo make contacts in such early primary states, the congressman said. This weekend, Mr. Tancredo was in Alta, Iowa, on his fourth visit to the crucial caucus state in the last six months.

Mr. Tancredo has said that he will throw his hat into the Iowa ring if no other Republican emerges who will "include immigration in their platform ... and do so with some degree of vigor, "the congressman said yesterday. So far, Mr. Tancredo said a former speaker of the House, Newt Gingrich - who wrote in a recent report for the Center for Immigration Studies that immigrants' dual citizenship posed an "insidious challenge" - has come the closest to being satisfactorily strong on the issue.

Yet Mr. Tancredo appears to enjoy some advantages Mr. Gingrich and his likely 2008 competitors do not, principally the support of an influential Iowa Republican, Rep. Steven King. Mr. King is one of 91 members of the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus, of which Mr. Tancredo is founder and chairman.

"Tom Tancredo needs to keep coming to Iowa," Mr. King said. "I want him on the stage in this debate."

Messrs. Tancredo and King, and the executive director of the Iowa Republican Party, Cullen Sheehan, indicated yesterday that Mr. Tancredo will have a natural base of support among 2008 caucus-goers.

While Iowa is further removed from the issue of illegal immigration than border states such as California and Arizona, Mr. Tancredo said, it has been surprisingly receptive to his message of ending illegal immigration and reducing the number of legal migrants permitted to enter the country. His Iowa audiences, the congressman said, "are as concerned about it as any group I've ever spoken to in Arizona."

Mr. Sheehan said that illegal immigration is a matter of importance to Iowa's caucus-goers, saying that most "want people to obey the law, and they want our government to uphold the laws we have." Mr. King said jobs in the agricultural industry were also a factor, citing as an example the Farmland Foods packing plant in Dennison, Iowa. Ten years ago, Mr. King said, eight Hispanics worked at the facility compared to 850 today.

Iowans, however, are focused mostly on national security: "How can a nation have a border they don't defend?" Mr. King said. "If it's not really a border, then you're not really a nation."

Mr. King said he also anticipated Mr. Tancredo's message to resonate with caucus-goers because of his focus on the cultural effects of massive immigration. Mr. Tancredo said that today's immigrants decline to become Americans, leading to a "balkanized" society. Immigration, Mr. Tancredo said, fuels and reinforces the divisive multiculturalist ideologies propagated by American elites in academia, the press, and politics.

In fact, it was outrage at multiculturalism in American schools that first brought Mr. Tancredo's attention to immigration. The congressman is a former junior high school teacher, and the schools' insistence on bilingual education and hostility toward America in textbooks and classrooms, combined with his reading of Arthur Schlesinger's "The Disuniting of America" in 1992, served as his road-to-Damascus moment on the need for immigration reform, Mr. Tancredo said.

Mr. Tancredo, a Denver native, left teaching to take a seat in Colorado's House of Representatives in 1976, and later served in the federal Department of Education under Presidents Reagan and Bush. In 1998, Mr. Tancredo was elected to Congress.

After founding the Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus in 1999, Mr. King said, Mr. Tancredo's "credibility is going up as the American public puts pressure on other members of Congress" on the matter of border security. When Mr. Tancredo first introduced amendments to restrict immigration, Mr. King said, the measures would receive 20 to 25 votes. "Three years ago, that same amendment got 60 to 70 votes. Now, that same amendment will get 100 or 110."

If Mr. Tancredo's star is rising among American voters and in the House, he may not be winning friends in the circles of Republican leadership.

The editor of RealClearPolitics.com, John McIntyre, said yesterday that Mr. Tancredo's candidacy poses "a real problem" for the GOP in 2008.

While the Colorado congressman's message might win votes as a hot-button issue in 2008 and 2012, Mr. McIntyre said, demographic trends suggested the position might prove electoral poison in 2016 and beyond as the American electorate becomes increasingly Hispanic, and if the Tancredo platform paints national Republicans as "anti-immigrant."

For Republicans to succeed in quieting Mr. Tancredo, satisfying the base's yearning for a serious immigration policy, and to avoid being tarred as nativist, it would be necessary for the GOP to nominate a popular candidate with a reputation for being a moderate-such as Senator McCain, of Arizona, or Mayor Giuliani - who would then embrace the issue in the 2008 campaign.


TOPICS: Extended News; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: aliens; elections; hillary2008; immigrantlist; immigration; iowa; plotsmindyou; tancredo; tancredo2008
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To: TLI
There is a huge difference between voting for constitutionalist in a party primary and voting for a non-entity like the anti-social incompetent misfits in the Constitution/Libertarian/whatever party (except in New York).

This is a 2 party system as a matter of physics that cannot be contraviened. Voting Constitution Party is akin to thinking you can defy gravity.

41 posted on 11/22/2005 1:01:31 PM PST by mbraynard (I don't even HAVE a mustache!)
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To: Wolfie

Eventually that will be true, thanks to our largely accidental and mostly unwanted policy of unending mass immigration, but it still isn't quite so now.

Florida is the only state where the Hispanic vote may have played an important part in recent Republican victories. Losing the latino vote badly in California hurts, but so does the poor showing with whites in the state. Same goes for Illinois and New York. GOP dominance in Texas is due to routinely winning over 70% of the white vote. That won't continue to guarantee success much longer, though, as whites lost majority status in Texas this past year, and as the electorate catches up, Dem prospects will improve in the Lone Star state. And in many of the narrowly-blue states (Penn, Wisconsin, Minnesota), the GOP would have won had it done a bit better with white voters.

So yes, the GOP has dug itself into a hole because even if immigration levels were cut tomorrow, the pro-Democrat latino population would continue to grow rapidly over the next few decades. But right now the GOP could still win w/o pandering to Hispanics, as they are destined to lose any such attempt against the Democrats, who mastered pandering a long time ago.


42 posted on 11/22/2005 1:02:21 PM PST by Aetius
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To: mbraynard

So why do "Hispanics who can vote" vote overwhelmingly for Democrats?


43 posted on 11/22/2005 1:02:35 PM PST by dagnabbit (Vincente Fox's opening line at the Mexico-USA summit meeting: "Bring out the Gimp!")
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To: The Old Hoosier
That's why McCain must not win the primary. But Tancredo will siphon off a few percentage points from the conservatives, and it could become a real problem.

And so now it all comes full circle. We get told we're not supposed to vote third-party, because the Democrats will win; that if you want to move things further to the right, do it in the GOP primaries. Now we're not supposed to vote "too conservative" in the GOP primaries, because otherwise McCain will be the nominee. So the upshot is, unless we're willing to color outside the lines that have been presented to us by the party hacks, we'll still have to dance to their tune. Sorry, but this cycle needs to be broken somewhere.

44 posted on 11/22/2005 1:03:01 PM PST by inquest (FTAA delenda est)
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To: dagnabbit
Good platform
Anti Illegal immigration
Stay the course in Iraq and the WOT


Gets my vote
45 posted on 11/22/2005 1:03:32 PM PST by txroadhawg ("Stuck on stupid? I invented stupid! " Al Gore)
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To: SC33

McCain is a scary nutjob.


46 posted on 11/22/2005 1:04:17 PM PST by Icelander (Legal Resident Since 2004)
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To: dagnabbit

So why do "Hispanics who can vote" vote overwhelmingly for Democrats?

Because it's money in the pocket


47 posted on 11/22/2005 1:04:20 PM PST by txroadhawg ("Stuck on stupid? I invented stupid! " Al Gore)
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To: mbraynard
It's a way of getting the attention of those in power. That's the role that third parties have traditionally played, and it's a role that's desperately needed now.
48 posted on 11/22/2005 1:06:08 PM PST by inquest (FTAA delenda est)
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To: Wolfie
A non-starter, realistically speaking. The Pubbies need the Hispanic vote to win, and if that means selling out to illegals, so be it.

The Republicans need the white vote to win, throw that away with an amnesty and its 1964 again.
49 posted on 11/22/2005 1:07:23 PM PST by fallujah-nuker (America needs more SAC and less empty sacs.)
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To: inquest

How many times did we sit here and laugh because the democrats were voting for a man they didn't like (John Kerry) just so they could beat Bush? I'm not going to play that game.

I will vote for whoever I damned well choose to vote for. If the party thinks they can blame me for their loss, then they can consider my vote lost for good.


50 posted on 11/22/2005 1:08:03 PM PST by cripplecreek (Never a minigun handy when you need one.)
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To: txroadhawg
Yes. After 16 years of enforced non-discussion of the third-world transformation of America under immigration-leftists Clinton and Bush, it is time for an open debate. Bring on Tancredo.
51 posted on 11/22/2005 1:08:09 PM PST by dagnabbit (Vincente Fox's opening line at the Mexico-USA summit meeting: "Bring out the Gimp!")
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To: Aetius

By the 2008 election, the immigration problem will be on its way to being solved.

Bomb throwers can`t lead and don`t win elections. Go ask Pat and Ross.


52 posted on 11/22/2005 1:08:13 PM PST by bybybill (GOD help us if the Rats win)
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To: Columbine

If the Constitution Party wants to matter, they need to start from the bottom up, instead of making a fuss over a Presidential candidate who will get 1 out of every 2000 votes.

Build local organizations get get people elected to school boards and county commissions, then work up to seats on the state legislature and the US Congress.

Once the machine is in place, then go for the Big Seat, when there will be a realistic chance of doing something other than helping a smelly hippie get into the White House.


53 posted on 11/22/2005 1:08:27 PM PST by Constantine XIII
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To: dagnabbit
[Hispanics who can vote are just as supportive of strict immigration policies as anyone else.]

So why do "Hispanics who can vote" vote overwhelmingly for Democrats?

Why would someone who supports strict immigration policies be especially more inclined to vote Republican than Democrat?

54 posted on 11/22/2005 1:08:39 PM PST by inquest (FTAA delenda est)
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To: Icelander

Do you have a link and source for this?
Thanks.


55 posted on 11/22/2005 1:09:24 PM PST by Admin Moderator
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To: peyton randolph
While you're at it, send them a photo of yourself burning $ 1,000 in cash that they COULD have had as campaign contributions. That will teach them.

My vote counts the same as Bill Gates.
56 posted on 11/22/2005 1:09:30 PM PST by fallujah-nuker (America needs more SAC and less empty sacs.)
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To: Icelander

Yes he is.


57 posted on 11/22/2005 1:09:32 PM PST by SC33
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To: Wolfie
A non-starter, realistically speaking. The Pubbies need the Hispanic vote to win, and if that means selling out to illegals, so be it.

Yup. Not to mention that many companies that use illegals to do work for them have lots of money that will flow into election coffers.

He won't get out of the gates. The mainstream GOP and the mainstream media will both ignore him, which leaves his campaign DOA.
58 posted on 11/22/2005 1:10:09 PM PST by af_vet_rr
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To: inquest

It sure got Clinton's attention. Oh, wait a minute. :P


59 posted on 11/22/2005 1:10:17 PM PST by Constantine XIII
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To: bybybill
By the 2008 election, the immigration problem will be on its way to being solved.

Yes. Permanent open borders will mean that the world is America and America is the world. Therefore, no such thing as immigration. Problem solved.

60 posted on 11/22/2005 1:10:59 PM PST by dagnabbit (Vincente Fox's opening line at the Mexico-USA summit meeting: "Bring out the Gimp!")
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