Friday, May 26, 2006

Vicente Fox Speaks to State Legislature (Assoc. Press May, 25, 2006).

It seems that this is the Bill that Vicente Fox wanted the whole time. Well if that is the case I am wondering what the catch is and where is the loop hole and how much trouble is this going to get us in. See This bill is supposed to make it harder to enter the counrtry, however the country who's Citizens cross over most and violate the Law most seems to be all in favor of the Bill leads me to think that there is a written loop hole!! I am wondering what that is???

I just hope the Current Presedent knows what he is getting into. I know that the bill is great since it addresses the Border with the stronger fencing, stronger presents at the wall/Fence/Country lines. Then they can not cross Illegaly however they will cross how we are not sure, they will probably use the trunk in the Honda Pickup, or the Nely cut floors in the Dodge Van when the seats are all folded up there is a storage place they can fit into.

But they will find away that they will get in and it will be a small percentatge that wil us e the wall. We need to aprehend and send back as fast as we can if not hold them in a camp simular to that of what we have in Cuba, and they will be held for a month and then they will go back to their country and that is it. They serve time for their running away.

We will see what happens in the House when the Bill goes over there...

Just way to much to speculate at this time!!
BSRancher....

Vicente Fox Speaks to State Legislature

Calls Immigration Bill historic

AP

- Mexican President Vicente Fox on Thursday called the U.S. Senate's vote on immigration policy a "monumental step forward" that marks a historic moment in the relationship between his country and the United States.




"It is a moment that millions of families have been hoping for. This is the moment that millions of people have been working for," he told a joint session of the California Legislature. "Today's historic vote is a monumental step forward, but we recognize that there is more debate ahead."

Fox addressed the Legislature hours after the Senate approved sweeping reforms that include tighter border security and a path to citizenship for many of the estimated 11 million to 12 million immigrants in the country illegally.

Fox was scheduled to meet privately afterward with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, their first meeting since the movie star became governor. Schwarzenegger said he would stress Mexico's responsibility for illegal immigration, while also touching on environmental and other issues of common interest.

California is the last stop on Fox's three-state visit to the western U.S., following appearances in Utah and Washington. In Seattle, Fox said Mexico does not support illegal migration and must expand economic growth so its citizens do not feel leaving the country is a financial necessity.

"Managing migration can be done, and can be done with a purpose and can be done to the betterment of the people involved in it," Fox said in a speech to the private Rainier Club in downtown Seattle.

The timing of the visit - as the Senate approved far-reaching immigration reforms - is awkward for the Mexican president, who has urged Congress to take a softer approach.

The bill passed Thursday would build a triple-layer border fence along 370 miles and add U.S. Border Patrol agents, while giving millions of illegal immigrants a means of earning citizenship. A bill previously passed in the House has no citizenship provision and makes it a felony to be in the U.S. illegally.

Fox opposes President Bush's recent decision to call on governors to send 6,000 National Guard troops to the southern border to back up the Border Patrol.

"Mexico believes that it will take more than just enforcement or building walls to truly solve the challenges caused by the immigration phenomenon," Fox said in his California speech.

Schwarzenegger has raised questions about Bush's plan to send National Guard troops to the border, although on Wednesday he said he was prepared to go along with it as long as the deployment is temporary.

New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson pledged his support for Bush's National Guard plan Thursday, after expressing concerns earlier about the cost, the duration of the mission and whether troops would spread too thinly.

"We must protect our borders, and New Mexico is a team player," Richardson said.

By late summer 200 of the state's National Guard troops will be helping the Border Patrol, in addition to the 68 guardsmen already stationed along the border, Richardson said.

Fox told California lawmakers that the destinies of Mexico and the U.S. are linked despite the challenges posed by illegal immigration.

"Let us work together as neighbors, as friends, as family," he said.

Several California GOP lawmakers were critical of the Mexican president's visit. About half a dozen Republicans said they would boycott his speech; others circulated yellow buttons with the words "No Mas" - no more - to wear to Fox's address.

A spokesman for Assembly Republican leader George Plescia said several members were unhappy that Fox had declined an invitation to meet with them. Fox met with Democratic Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez before his speech.

The illegal immigration issue has been a political land mine in California for a decade.

California has more illegal immigrants than any other state - 2.4 million according to a 2004 study by the Pew Hispanic Center. They work predominantly on farms, in construction and in the service industry, from hotels to restaurants.

Immigrants also are a major source of income to Mexico. Mexicans living in the United States sent home about $20 billion last year. And Latin American immigrants in California, the majority of whom are Mexican, send more money home than from any other state, more than $9.6 billion in 2004.

In addition, Mexico is the state's No. 1 trading partner, bringing in almost $18 billion in California exports last year. California's exports to Mexico directly or indirectly support 177,000 jobs, according to Schwarzenegger's office.

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