By The Prowler on 6.4.07 @ 12:08AM
A warning to Republicans about the immigration bill. Also: Mitt moves right from the beginning. Plus: McCain's energy level.
MEISSNER'S SHOP
In his capacity as a senior White House official in the Clinton
administration, now-Rep. Rahm Emanuel actively
participated in putting together a strategy to fast-track legal and
illegal immigrants through any means possible for citizenship so
that they could vote for the Democratic Party. This, according to a
scathing, but long-forgotten report out of the Department of
Justice.
As debate rages about Democratic intentions on the immigration
legislation, it would be useful for all to turn to a July 2000
Department of Justice Office of the Inspector General report entitled "An Investigation of the Immigration
and Naturalization Service's Citizenship USA Initiative."
The report was an indictment not only of Clinton White House
interference in the Immigration and Naturalization process, but
also of White House interference in the INS's Citizenship USA
(CUSA) initiative of 1996.
CUSA outsourced some INS citizenship requirement programs
(English language testing, for example), and was designed to speed
up citizenship opportunities so that newly minted citizens could
vote for the Democratic Party, if not in 1996, then in 1998 and
2000.
According to the report:
Beginning in 1993, the demand for naturalization began
to increase at a staggering rate and application backlogs developed
at INS offices throughout the country. By June 1995, INS was
receiving applications for naturalization at a rate twice as high
as it had the previous year. INS projected that without a serious
effort to reduce this application backlog, by the summer of 1996 an
eligible applicant would have to wait three years from the date of
application to be naturalized as a U.S. citizen.
On August 31, 1995, INS Commissioner Doris M.
Meissner announced "Citizenship USA" (CUSA), an initiative
to reduce the backlog of pending naturalization applications to the
point where an eligible applicant would be naturalized within six
months of application. The goal of the initiative was to reach this
level of processing "currency" within one year. The effort focused
on the workload in the five districts in the country -- dubbed "Key
Cities" for CUSA -- which then had the largest application
backlogs: Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco, Miami, and Chicago.
To reach the CUSA goal, INS dramatically increased its
naturalization workforce in the Key Cities, opened new offices
dedicated to naturalization adjudication, and engaged new
processing strategies in an effort to "streamline" the
naturalization process.
Meissner drew the White House into the mix via a working group she
co-chaired with
Carol Rasco, the President's
Domestic Policy Advisor, according to the report. "This working
group, under the aegis of the Domestic Policy Council (DPC),
coordinated the Clinton Administration's immigration policy and was
the venue for most of the contacts between the White House and INS
during the Clinton Administration's first term."
According to the report, "Director of Special Projects Rahm
Emanuel often attended these meetings. According to witnesses at
INS and the Department of Justice, Emanuel was increasingly
responsible at the White House for issues involving the Department
of Justice." The report added that Emanuel's interest in DOJ was
"enforcement" issues.
"This report lays out in stark details exactly what Emanuel and
the rest of the Democrats are trying to do with immigration reform,
and President Bush and Sen. John McCain are
playing right into their hands," says a Republican House member,
who does not support the President's position. "People should read
this report and understand exactly what this fight is all
about."
MITT AND PAT
If former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney suddenly
sounds tougher and pithier on immigration issues, thank pundit and
former presidential candidate Pat Buchanan for it.
According to Romney insiders, the man who has flip-flopped on
immigration sat down privately with Buchanan late last week to
discuss the issue. The meeting came at the same time that Romney
also sat down with at least one high-profile conservative
syndicated columnist for an off the record discussion.
Other Romney campaign staff would not confirm that the Buchanan
meeting took place. Several denied that Romney would ever meet with
Buchanan. "Given his relationship with the Republican Party, he's
not necessarily the kind of influencer we'd be looking for,"
sniffed a Romney aide in Massachusetts.
Another said, "If the governor met with Pat, it would have been
informal, and about a lot of things, not just immigration, though
Pat has a very good handle on how to talk about it, especially with
conservatives and libertarians."
A longtime Buchanan friend added, "If anyone can make a person
feel certain about where you stand on an issue, it's Pat."
HOW MUCH LONGER?
As the campaign of Sen. John McCain continues to
shed staff, there is talk inside Republican circles that the man
who has been out on the trail the longest may not last the
summer.
But McCain insiders say that the man from Arizona has been
working donors hard, making calls to large fundraisers and keeping
his energy level up on the trail.
"He's not going anywhere," says a McCain insider. "We're not
getting leaner, we're getting the right people into the right
jobs."
Recently the campaign fired two of its evangelical outreach
coordinators, as well as a state coordinator in South Carolina, a
state in which McCain has worked particularly hard to build
support.
topics:
John McCain, NATO, Immigration, Energy