Showing posts with label Immigration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Immigration. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Smarter than I look . . . or lucky

Thanks to Wilkes-Barre poliblogger Danny Bauder for reminding me just how prescient, or just dumb and lucky, I can be. It was just a smidgen over a year ago that I commented on his blog about how the recently-destroyed Hazleton anti-tolerance ordnance was likely to be eviscerated on preemption grounds. I'd forgotten about that until Danny sent me the link to my little note.

From the Court's smackdown(page 186): We find for the plaintiffs on Count I of the complaint. Federal law pre-empts IIRA and RO. The ordinances disrupt a well-established federal scheme for regulating the presence and employment of immigrants in the United States. They violate the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution and are unconstitutional.

Heh heh. Just like a broken clock . . . .

Thursday, July 26, 2007

The Hazleton Ordinance Smackdown -- High Lights of the Low Lifes

The United States District Court in Scranton has issued an over 200-page opinion, granting a permanent injunction against enforcement of the anti-Hispanic Ordinance parlayed into 15-minutes of infamy by Hazleton Mayor Lou "Hispanics The Source of All Crime, My Ass The Source of All Truth" Barletta.

We've been reviewing the Federal Smackdown and offer here some of the high lights of the Court's findings. We learn, not surprisingly, that the Hazleton goon squad (which earned the support and admiration of the Ku Klux Klan) was heavy handed in dealing with Latino and Hispanic residents, and somewhat less than direct and forthright in dealing with the Court. Most of all, we see again that NEPA works hard to justify its reputation, kids. The Court takes us through many stories of official, police, and mob intimidation of people in Hazleton based solely on what they look like. Of course, it is their fault -- they had the bad grace to be Hispanic in Hazleton.

The Barletta Klan first tired to get the plaintiffs tossed -- telling the Court that they didn't have "standing". "Standing" is the right to complaint about someone in Court. Not every person is entitled to right every wrong -- there has to be a legally-recognized harm suffered by the plaintiff as the result of a violation of some kind of legal duty owned by the defendant to the plaintiff.

A landlord plaintiff complained that, since the Barletta Bigots enacted their anti-Hispanic ordinance, requiring tenants to get a permit to rent a room, and drafting landlords as virtual law-enforcement agents, he couldn't rent his property. The Court had no problem rejecting the goon squad's argument that the landlord was "merely" complaining about not being able to do business with "illegal aliens".

We disagree with the defendant that these injuries cannot be recognized by the law because they constitute a complaint about an inability to rent to illegal immigrants. The plaintiffs testified that they were unaware of the immigration status of their renters. No evidence, therefore, indicates that the renters they lost were illegal immigrants. Such tenants may have been legal residents who did not desire to live in a town that appeared (to them) to seek to exclude Spanish-speaking residents. Such tenants may also have concluded that they did not want to register with the town and provide private information to the City as a condition of residing there. Perhaps they found the fees required for a permit onerous. In any case, we will not assume that the renters plaintiff lost were necessarily illegal immigrants.

Not content with driving landlords into bankruptcy by merely passing ordinances, apparently the Barletta Bigots enlisted the heavy hands of the Hazleton police to harass legal business people who had the poor manners to be Hispanic or Latino. One couple testified about how the police would park across from their restaurant, apparently and very effectively scaring away all business from people who had the poor judgment not to want to be harassed simply because of the color of their skins or lilt of their accent.

The Lechugas originally came from Mexico and had lived in Hazleton for 16 years. Legal permanent residents, they opened a store featuring Mexican-sourced food products. They weren't getting rich, but they were getting by -- until Barletta decided that Hispanics must be the source of all crime. After the anti-Hispanic ordinance was passed, their grocery business began to dry up and they ended up shuttering the place earlier this year.

Before the ordinaces passed, the couple also opened a restaurant featuring Mexican dishes. It did a good business -- until they and their customers were harassed by the Hazleton police:

A police car was often parked across the street from the restaurant, and after a police officer paid a visit, “people began to comment that the police [were] there to take the clients away when they came to eat.” This made potential customers feel “intimidated, and that is the reason why we lost our business.”

They closed the restaurant. Nice touch, Lou. You and your goons managed to eliminate two healthy businesses from your town. (The Lechugas had the class not to seek monetary damages from the City for their lost business. As a result, the Court dismissed them as plaintiffs after first deciding that they had standing and could have sought money, if financial compensation were their goal.)

The Court related many similar stories of legal residents and business owners who suffered losses or had to shut down previously-successful businesses because of the actions of Barletta's Bigots. The testimony elicited at the trial and highlighted by the Court showed how the governmental attack on a minority group created an atmosphere of hate in the NEPA burgh:

"They had people that were in fear because the police were stopping them on the sidewalks or stopping them on the driveway and asking for documentation just because of their looks. We have businessowners saying, we have bricks through our [windows], and we can’t identify who [threw the brick], but obviously it was because of the environment where we are living, where people think that it is okay to show that Latinos are not welcome here. There was all kind of fear, and what is going to happen with our sons. Should we still send them to school? What is going to happen to our church? Should we still go to our church?"

Way to go, Mayor.

Ah, but what of the illegals themselves? The goon squad wanted the Court to toss their claims out -- "They're illegal! They're illegal!" shouted the defendants. "So?" says the Court? Granting the Barletta Bigots a brief civics lesson, the Court ruled that due process applies to every person in our Country -- not just the ones that Barletta are comfortable with:

These plaintiffs claim that the rental registration requirements and harboring provisions of IIRA violate their rights under federal law and the United States Constitution, including their right to privacy. We find that the anonymous plaintiffs have standing to challenge Hazleton’s ordinances. They have suffered concrete and particularized injuries which are actual or imminent. These plaintiffs have either been forced from the property which they had rented or had been told by their landlords that they would have to be evicted due to the ordinances. . . . Similarly, plaintiffs would suffer an injury to their privacy rights if forced to turn over
private information in order to gain a rental permit. Such an injury is imminent, as plaintiffs intend to remain in Hazleton and would be required to obey the ordinance if it is enforced.

. . . . We reject defendant’s argument that these plaintiffs lack standing because they do not have authorization to reside in the United States . . . . First, the defendant appears to argue that because plaintiffs would be denied residency permits under the Hazleton ordinance they lack authorization to reside anywhere in the United States. . . . The tautology of this argument is likewise apparent: defendant contends that plaintiff would not be able to obtain a residency permit in the city and therefore cannot complain about being required to do so.

This argument appears to be a species of argument often heard in recent discussions of the national immigration issue: because illegal aliens broke the law to enter this country, they should not have any legal recourse when rights due them under the federal constitution or federal law are violated. We cannot say clearly enough that persons who enter this country without legal authorization are not stripped immediately of all their rights because of this single illegal act.

Fundamental to the American legal tradition is the notion that those accused of and convicted of crimes possess fundamental rights which are not abrogated simply because of such person’s alleged behavior. . . .The contemporary concern with and opprobrium towards undocumented aliens does not lead us to the conclusion that those who violate the laws to enter the United States can be subject without protest to any procedure or legislation, no matter how violative of the rights to which those persons would normally be entitled as persons in the United States. Our legal system is designed to provide rights and exact justice simultaneously.

The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that no State may “deprive any person of life, liberty or property, without due process of law; nor deny any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. CONST. amend. XIV § 1. (emphasis added). . . . .

The anonymous plaintiffs are persons, and they seek to vindicate rights guaranteed them under the federal constitution. They have standing to sue in this court.


That last bit gives me chills. It says to the plaintiffs and, as important, to the world what the bigots like Barletta and the incompetent criminals like the Despicable Cretin and his Grey Eminence deny – that America values liberty and honors every man by providing a justice system intended to protect those liberties – even putative criminals, even non-citizens.

Even those “illegal aliens” – Even “they have standing to sue in THIS court.”

So desperate were the Barletta Bigots to avoid anyone looking into the merits of what they tried to do, the Court devoted over half its discussion to the standing and procedural issues. When finally it was able to address the merits of the legality of the loony ordinance (which the recently-departed Rick Santorum apparently had a hand in), the City of Creeps faired no better:

Whatever frustrations officials of the City of Hazleton may feel about the current state of federal immigration enforcement, the nature of the political system in the United States prohibits the City from enacting ordinances that disrupt a carefully drawn federal statutory scheme.

Even if federal law did not conflict with Hazleton’s measures, the City could not enact an ordinance that violates rights the Constitution guarantees to every person in the United States, whether legal resident or not. The genius of our constitution is that it provides rights even to those who evoke the least sympathy from the general public. In that way, all in this nation can be confident of equal justice under its laws. Hazleton, in its zeal to control the presence of a group deemed undesirable, violated the rights of such people, as well as others within the community.

Since the United States Constitution protects even the disfavored, the ordinances cannot be enforced.




Elsewhere:

Wilkes-Barre Citizen's Voice: Hazleton illegal immigration ordinance struck down
Allentown Morning Call: Appeals next in Hazleton case
Jurist: Federal judge strikes down Pennsylvania city illegal immigration laws
Scran'en Times-Tribune: Hazleton immigration ordinance ruled unconstitutional
Philly.Com: Judge strikes down Hazleton's illegal immigrant law
Hazleton Standardless Speaker: JUDGE STRIKES DOWN HAZLETON ORDINANCE
NewsMax: Judge Voids Anti-Illegal Immigrant Law in Pennsylvania
WaPo: Pa. Judge Blocks City's Ordinances Against Illegal Immigration
USA Today: PA Immigration law voided
NYT: Judge Voids Tough Anti-Immigration Law

Hazleton Illegal Immigrant Ordinance -- ILLEGAL! Federal Court Strikes it Down.

Decision here. More to come.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Uh-oh. The Dick Better Hope Lou Barletta Doesn't See This.

Or he's in for a world of hurt . . . .

Thursday, March 22, 2007

What More Do You Need to Know?

"Ku Klux Klan group supports Barletta"



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Thursday, March 15, 2007

Barletta: My Ass The Source of All Truth

Hazleton's Bigot-in-Chief testified in defense of the Hazleton anti-Hispanic ordinance in federal court in Scran'en yesterday. His testimony confirmed that all of the findings and purposes of the act came not from reasoned study of objective evidence, but from his fat, hairy ass.

When the home office of NEPA bigotry (a/k/a Hazleton) passed the anti-Hispanic ordinance, it did so after declaring certain findings, including the following:
The People of the City of Hazleton find and declare:

. . . . C. That unlawful employment, the harboring of illegal aliens in dwelling units in the City of Hazleton, and crime committed by illegal aliens harm the health, safety and welfare of authorized US workers and legal residents in the City of Hazleton. Illegal immigration leads to higher crime rates, subjects our hospitals to fiscal hardship and legal residents to substandard quality of care, contributes to other burdens on public services, increasing their cost and diminishing their availability to legal residents, and diminishes our overall quality of life.

D. That the City of Hazleton is authorized to abate public nuisances and empowered and mandated by the people of Hazleton to abate the nuisance of illegal immigration by diligently prohibiting the acts and policies that facilitate illegal immigration in a manner consistent with federal law and the objectives of Congress. . . .

F. This ordinance seeks to secure . . . the right to live in peace free of the threat crime, to enjoy the public services provided by this city without being burdened by the cost of providing goods, support and services to aliens unlawfully present in the United States, and to be free of the debilitating effects on their economic and social well being imposed by the influx of illegal aliens . . . .
So, the act claims, Hazleton didn't just enact this ordinance after a bull session around the city kitchen table. They carefully examined the facts and reached certain findings which compelled the ordinance and justified it as an exercise of the state power.

Except that,
Barletta admitted he did not contact the school district to ask about alleged overcrowding, call the hospital for statistics on the treatment of illegal immigrants or seek any data to back up any of the claims. . . . ''So you had no data on hospital treatments or other health care?'' asked Walczak, legal director of the ACLU of Pennsylvania. ''No,'' Barletta said. He had no data on any other city services, from sanitation to fire calls, that could prove his contention that illegal immigrants were draining city services and the budget, Barletta said. But he claimed he didn't need statistics to point out what was obvious to him and other longtime Hazleton residents.
Oh, but he doesn't need troublesome things like facts when he has eyes that can see and ears that can hear and a fat hairy ass from which he can pull his facts:
Barletta said he assumed schools were overcrowded because classes were being held in trailers, and he read in the local newspaper that test scores had fallen. Barletta also said he relied on conversations with hospital personnel to determine that ''uninsured people'' were trying to use the emergency room . . . . Barletta, who was born and raised in Hazleton, said the city now suffers from increased crime and violence, and that street gangs have established a foothold. He said several murders involving illegal immigrants . . . cemented his belief that Hazleton had a problem. ''Our city is crumbling under the strain of illegal immigration,'' Barletta said. ''Most people in Hazleton didn't need numbers".
Well, of course they don't. All they need to know if that their Bigot-in-Chief is gonna help rid their turf of the Sharks.

You see, the "numbers" can be inconvenient, as the trial will show soon:
Not discussed (by Barletta) were crime statistics supplied by the Hazleton Police Department that were sought by the plaintiffs and obtained under a court order Monday.

Barletta said he had not seen the statistics, which covered five years beginning in 2001, and U.S. District Judge James Munley barred Walczak from questioning Barletta about them until Friday, when Barletta will return to the witness stand.

Outside court, Walczak said the statistics revealed that crime in Hazleton has not increased out of proportion to the rise in population, and that illegal immigrants were not committing a lot of crimes. Walczak said the city identified only 20 to 30 serious crimes that involved illegal immigrants out of more than 8,000 crimes.
So, Barletta admitted not only did the facts and findings come fresh out of his fat hairy ass, but the he refused to even look at the actual crime statistics gathered by his own police force.

But, apart from the false and baseless crime and health care "findings", there's the economic impact on the city of all these illegals that justify the city smacking down Hispanics. Except, those pesky facts again:
Earlier in court, Barletta and Walczak went over Hazleton's economic troubles and drop in population from 38,000 after World War II to 22,000 in 2000. By the end of the 1990s, the city was nearly $1 million in debt. Part of its resurgence, Walczak argued, had to do with the arrival of thousands of Hispanics after 2000.

The new arrivals propelled Hazleton's population and ushered in a renaissance, as Hispanics bought and rehabilitated shuttered buildings and opened roughly 60 businesses. Assessed property values rose three years in a row.
Oh well, at least the law was carefully written. Except, this week it was announced that, "[f]or the fifth time Hazleton is rewriting the Illegal Immigration Relief Act. "

Good thing I subscribe to the Morning Call, because the people in Hazleton get an entirely different picture of the trial than those in Allentown.


UPDATE: The Hazleton pretend newspaper, the Standardless Speakeasy, didn't update its website until late in the day. When it did, it became clear that the local fish wrap is continuing its blow job pieces for the City's Bigot-in-Chief. As they did yesterday, the so-called report misrepresented what really happened at the trial.



(Photo Credit: Barletta's Source, Thanks to Planet Kornerson)

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Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Hazleton CAN Just Make This Stuff Up

As reported in this morning's Morning Call:

"Hazleton's City Council approved its ordinance on illegal immigration without any police data supporting the conclusion that a surge in violent crime was caused by illegal immigrants, the council president testified Tuesday. Joe Yanuzzi, who has served as council president since 2003, also said that council didn't obtain any data from Hazleton Hospital supporting the assertion, included in the ordinance, that illegal immigrants also created a fiscal hardship for the city's health services."

Even the Scran'en paper saw it the same way as the Call: "Hazleton City Council President Joseph Yanuzzi testified Tuesday neither he nor council — nor anyone in the city to his knowledge — conducted any research, thought to commission any study or received any training on immigration documentation before passing the controversial ordinance."

Nice. What a bunch of yahoos up there. They basically just sat around the table and decided that it was 'all them god damned spics' causing all their problems, so they wrote a law. So, if the Scran'en and Allentown papers were that hard on Hazleton, you can bet that the local Wilkesberry and Hazleton rags must have slammed them, right? Oh, sweetie, you are so innocent. You forget that we are dealing with NEPA and ethics, even journalistic ethics, remain merely a punch line up there.

One of the local rags pretending to be a newspaper calls this "the full flowering of democracy in action". "Full flowering of democracy"? Who are they trying to kid? Oh, yeah, their readers.

The Hazleton government acted like a street gang looking to rid their territory of the Sharks, and not only do the local newspapers ignore the testimony, they praise what they are witnessing as the "full flowering of democracy". Hey, one guess on which county in Pennsylvania is the fasted shrinking county in the state. (And if Luzerne isn't number one, it is damned near close to the top -- no one wants to stay there.)

Worse yet, the Hazleton paper didn't even bother to mention that the stated predicate for the entire law was just pulled out of Lou Barletta's ass. To the contrary, that birdcage liner reports, as fact, that the "council adopted [the act] in response to crime". This isn't even attributed to anyone. Reporting on the same trial, on the same day, that the Morning Call reported that the city council's head thug admitted that they just made up the claim that "illegals" were causing their "crime surge", the incompetent Hazleton paper reports to their readers -- as fact so clear that it doesn't need attribution -- that the anti-Hispanic legislation was "adopted in response to crime".

Ignorant bastards, incompetent bigots. You decide who is what. You won't be wrong.


(Photo Credit: WSS Movie Still, Allociné)


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Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Ethics, NEPA Style

In perusing the NEPA "newspapers", so-called, for my rant about the inept response in dem parts to the recent snow storm, another item attracted my attention.

On Sunday past, a state superior court judge was the feature speaker at a local Republican Party conclave. The judge's speech was a passionate statement of support for the racist Hazleton immigration ordinance and its bigoted Mayor; not to be content, the judge also declared that the first amendment ought be rescinded for those who don't live in Hazleton: “I don’t think that the debate about the Hazleton ordinance should be allowed to be set by people who are not from the area". Yeah, well, anyway. That the judge, a Hazleton resident, a Republican, had such views isn't terribly surprising.

What caught my attention is that he was expressing them, for a political organization, even whilst a legal challenge to the ordinance was underway. The local newspaper said that the judge "prefaced his remarks by saying that the judicial code of ethics prevented him from speaking on the court case involving Hazleton’s Illegal Immigration Relief Act, he defended city Mayor Louis Barletta and council members as honorable people who shouldn't’t be berated by outsiders."

Indeed. Actually, that's not exactly what the Code of Judicial Conduct says. And if the state of journalism in NEPA wasn't as pathetic as it is, a real reporter would have known that -- or at least would have looked it up -- and called the judge on it. Let us begin with the first, informing Canon of that Code:
An independent and honorable judiciary is indispensable to justice in our society. Judges should participate in establishing, maintaining, and enforcing, and should themselves observe, high standards of conduct so that the integrity and independence of the judiciary may be preserved. The provisions of this Code should be construed and applied to further that objective.
Everything in the Code is to be read in light and supportive of Canon 1. And, what does the Code actually say about judges giving speeches and talking in public? Well, the judge got part of it correct, Canon 3 does prohibit comment about pending matters:
Judges should abstain from public comment about a pending proceeding in any court . . . .
Apparently, the judge thinks that means it is okay to talk about the issues surrounding a pending court case, as long as he disclaims that he is talking about that case. Here are some of his comments:
Stevens said local problems caused by illegal immigration include citizens having to pay for illegal immigrants’ “visits late at night to emergency rooms when no one’s around.” He also knows first-hand that law enforcement is frustrated when the federal Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement tells officers who have apprehended illegal immigrants to “let them go.”

Stevens called for “common sense” decisions in courts when dealing with illegal immigrants. He said the federal government should allow state and local police to enforce immigration laws, county district attorneys to prosecute offenders and county and state judges to hear the cases.

Stevens said the money the federal government would save could be given to local governments for enforcement. “The law will be enforced and we won’t have the strain on our city resources that we have now.”
And, to be sure, judges are encouraged to speak out on matters relating to the administration of justice, but to do so in a way that will not suggest partiality on any issue:
Judges, subject to the proper performance of their judicial duties, may engage in the following quasi-judicial activities, if in doing so they do not cast doubt on their capacity to decide impartially any issue that may come before them: A. They may speak, write, lecture, teach, and participate in other activities concerning the law, the legal system, and the administration of justice.
But none of this is proper justification for a sitting appellate court judge to wax on in support of an ordinance being challenged in court -- even if not his own court. But, more fundamentally, what the hell was the judge doing as the featured speaker at a partisan political event? Forget what he was talking about, why was he there at all? Remember Canon 1 -- it is first for a reason:
An independent and honorable judiciary is indispensable to justice in our society.
Here's the official comment to the Model Code on which the Pennsylvania Code is based, explaining the importance of Canon 1:
Deference to the judgments and rulings of courts depends upon public confidence in the integrity and independence of judges. The integrity and independence of judges depends in turn upon their acting without fear or favor. A judiciary of integrity is one in which judges are known for their probity, fairness, honesty, uprightness, and soundness of character. An independent judiciary is one free of inappropriate outside influences. Although judges should be independent, they must comply with the law, including the provisions of this Code. Public confidence in the impartiality of the judiciary is maintained by the adherence of each judge to this responsibility. Conversely, violation of this Code diminishes public confidence in the judiciary and thereby does injury to the system of government under law.
Proceeding from these first principles, consider Canon 7, o'erlooked by the judge and reporter here:
A judge . . . should not . . . make speeches for a political organization.
Regardless the topic of the speech, a sitting judge should not even be attending a Republican Party event -- much less being the featured speaker, much, much less expounding on an issue hot in the courts in NEPA.

Judges shouldn't be attending partisan, fundraising events like the local Republican Party Lincoln Day dinner.

Period.



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Tuesday, December 05, 2006

Bigots Can't Help Themselves

Dis'z 'merica dammit.

Without so much as a flinch betraying any recognition of the irony, a small town in Nevada has made it illegal to fly foreign flags, or for officials to speak Spanish.

Smaller than the town itself are the minds of these yahoos; smaller still, their understanding of what America is all about.

They use the immigration crisis in their minds as cover for their blatant bigotry. Much like the miserable failure, who uses his fake brand of christianity to give cover to his bloody invasions and personal approval of torture.

Jesus, and America, save me from your followers.

Oh, here's the contact information you might want, if you'd like to send them a few hundred an email or two about how much you appreciate their willingness to trample the Bill of Rights to protect us.

David Richards,Town Manager: drichards@pahrumpnv.org

The board members who voted for the ordinances:

Ronald W. Johnson
Cell 910-1245
miron@usintouch.com

Paul Willis
Work 727-1404
Cell 764-7535
nyegop@usintouch.com

Michael Miraglia (this is the genius behind the stupidity, he appears to be something of a thug)
775/727-5107 ext 340
m.m@netscape.com

Apparently, the town, Pahrump, Nevada, will now need to come up with a new name, since it is a Paiute word, not English. Probably not something that idiot Miraglia thought about.

(To his credit, the local Sheriff is refusing to enforce the flag flying ban.)

(Image Credit: Daughters of the Revolution, by Grant Wood, Cincinnati Art Museum, via Your Daily Art)

Friday, August 11, 2006

Local Anti-Immigration Laws -- It's All the Rage

One after another, township supervisors and borough councils are dabbling in ordinances relating to immigration. Forget for the time being that this is a federal problem and it is unlikely that any of these local laws are legal. That hardly matters to the local yokels pushing them -- the anti-immigration frenzy gives them cover for their bigotry. Some clear thinking today from the Pocono Record on yet another municipality caught up in the latest fad:
The federal government — with a president, a House of Representatives and a Senate all controlled by one political party — has done nothing about immigration laws in the last five years. Now, with that President's popularity at an all time low and midterm elections looming, that party has reached into its arsenal of campaign weapons and pulled out "fear of illegal immigrants" as a way to win elections in November.

Folks, if they did nothing to solve this problem for five years, why let them use it as a campaign issue now?

And why encourage municipalities to act in an area where effective action is only possible at a national level?

This political party has, since the first campaign of George W. Bush, specialized in mobilizing its voters through fear. Do not encourage them. Do not help them. And do not think that a municipal ordinance is going to solve a problem that may not even exist.

What should be happening right now is this: Millions of Americans ask the political party in power why it is shouting about an alleged problem it has had the ability to solve any time it wanted. Do they think we are all gullible, that we can't see through the threadbare tactics of xenophia?

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

New Rasmussen Poll Instructive for Bob Casey

Rasmussen has released the results of its July 2006 Poll on the PA Senate race, but only to Premium Members. I'll wait for a leak or the public release . . . .

But in another Poll released today, Rasmussen reports that 78% of potential voters consider the immigration issue as "important". Senator Santorum has been turning over the stones looking for an issue that will stick, and he thinks he's found it in immigration. As usual, he grossly distorts the proposals out there for dealing with the problem and offers no substance on what he would do with the 11-million or so undocumented aliens working in the United States today. Over the last month, he managed to win back a majority of his uber-conservative base by pounding away at the imaginary amnesty being offered in the bi-partisan proposal on the table now.

Similarly as usual, the Casey campaign seems unable or unsure how to handle the Santorum spin. But if the latest Rasmussen poll on the issue does anything, it shows Casey two things.

First, that three-quarters of voters think it is an important issue -- 47% said it was "Very Important" and 31% "Somewhat Important". This really isn't "new" news. Anyone paying attention has seen that develop over the last three months. But, the Casey campaign is all but ignoring the issue. Although a top or near top priority for such a huge percent of the voters, the issue gets no heading in Bob Casey campaign site page on the "Issues". I would have done a search of the site, but the Casey Campaign hasn't provided a search mechanism for its website.

The Casey Campaign's blinders on immigration isn't a great surprise, though. The other top-of-the list issue for everyone is --- all together, please -- that's right, "IRAQ". But, click on "Issues" on the Casey front page and you can see that Iraq isn't even on the drop-down menu. If you guess that it might be under "National Security", you'll find three paragraphs on Iraq -- below the fold. (And they don't say anything.) But this post isn't about Iraq.

On immigration, Casey needs to recognize the passions which the Republicans and Santorum have inflamed. He needs to address the issue head-on and say which of the pending proposals he supports and why. Clearly and up front. If he keeps assuming a win in this election, he'll give a better and smarter campaigner the opportunity he is looking for to close the gap.

I said there were two lessons from this poll and there are. The second lesson is that Santorum and his Republican buddies may have fooled many into thinking that the undocumented workers have been offered amnesty, and therefore generated significant opposition to the plan. Rasmussen says that 39% favor the plan put forward by Republicans Hutchinson and Pence, while 49% oppose it.

BUT, support soars to 55% when respondents are told that
as part of the proposal, illegal immigrants would have to leave the U.S. and apply for re-entry. Providing that they have a job awaiting them, these workers could then return to the U.S. legally. After working legally for a period of 17 years, these individuals would then be able to apply for citizenship.
I know, it's a lot to ask. Casey has got to figure out a way to string together the information in two sentences as effectively as the republicans chant "no amnesty". But most people aren't complete idiots and they can be made to understand that Santorum is flat-out lying to them about the extant proposals.

I'm not really expecting the Campaign to change their ostrich strategy. I just hope that their seeming arrogance and refusal to give the voters substance (including a few debates in heavily-populated areas) doesn't result in us getting stuck with Santorum for another six.