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nevadamedic
05-26-2007, 01:39 AM
WASHINGTON (AP) -- Immigration arrests under President Bush are "stagnant and unimpressive" despite massive increases in Border Patrol agents and other immigration enforcement measures imposed since 2000, a report found.

Bush promoted border enforcement successes this week while pushing Congress for a comprehensive immigration policy overhaul. But the centrist private group Third Way questioned his record in a study released Thursday. It found that arrests and deportations are down almost 30 percent since the Clinton years.

"The decline in immigration enforcement has been steady, dramatic and long-standing," said Jim Kessler, the group's vice president for policy and a co-author of the report. "This may not be the cause of our illegal immigration crisis, but it has certainly contributed to it."

Like Bush, the group argues for a comprehensive immigration bill, including sealed borders, increased law enforcement and a path to citizenship for the 12 million illegal immigrants in the United States today. Such a bill is being debated in the Senate. Bush supports it.

At a news conference Thursday, Bush defended his record.

"There's going to be a doubling of the Border Patrol agents; there's going to be fencing and berms and different types of equipment to help the Border Patrol do its job in a better way," he said.

According to the study, however, it would take more than 100 years to deport all the illegal immigrants in the United States at the current rate of arrests, assuming the flow of migrants across the border completely stopped.

The report suggests part of the reason is that after September 11, 2001, the Border Patrol was assigned to guard against terrorists as well as illegal migrants. It also points out that enforcement efforts have targeted immigrants but largely failed to punish the employers who hire them.

Among the report's findings:


Apprehensions on the Southwest border have declined by 350,000 per year, almost 30 percent from the Clinton years.


The number of deportable aliens found at the northern border and border locations other than the Southwest has dropped by almost 40 percent.


Although the number of immigration-related arrests at the workplace has risen each year since 2003, 84 percent of those are workers rather than employers.

There is no realistic chance of solving the immigration crisis without a comprehensive new immigration policy, the report concludes.

http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/05/25/immigration.enforcement.ap/index.html

82Marine89
05-26-2007, 08:22 AM
Like Bush, the group argues for a comprehensive immigration bill, including sealed borders, increased law enforcement and a path to citizenship for the 12 million illegal immigrants in the United States today. Such a bill is being debated in the Senate. Bush supports it.



Comprehensive? I call bullshit. All the enforcement measures they propose are already laws on the books. Making new laws to enforce existing laws is nothing but a waste of my time and tax dollars. I was promised back in 1986 that there would not be another amnesty bill. My gov't is lying to me again. It's time we stop being the silent majority and start being the vocal majority.

Here is a solution to the problem. Operation Wetback (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Wetback)

Doniston
05-26-2007, 09:45 AM
As noted, I am a Bush-basher, but let's be fair.

any insinuation that the above report is the fault of Bush is ridiculous. -----true it is under his watch, but a president has only so much direct involvement, and this is out of his direct control.

Gaffer
05-26-2007, 03:18 PM
As noted, I am a Bush-basher, but let's be fair.

any insinuation that the above report is the fault of Bush is ridiculous. -----true it is under his watch, but a president has only so much direct involvement, and this is out of his direct control.

Your right on that. But someone is responsible for this poor showing. Most likely a Bush appointee who needs to be fired. Like the head of ICE.