September 18, 2007
Disappointed Democrat Wishes Hillary Could Get Immigration Reform Right
By
Donald A. Collins
At the elegant home of one of
Washington's most gracious hostesses, some 300 loyal
supporters gathered on September 17th to meet and
hear from the
leading Democratic contender for the Presidency
of the United States. On a gloriously cool and
clear night, the well-coiffed ladies and suited
gentlemen were treated to the melodious offerings of
Michael Feinstein, the purveyor of
popular show tunes with special emphasis on
Gershwin (he knew Ira well) and whom I had heard
often when I lived in
San Francisco.
The perfect stage for the
candidate—and she lived up to the advance billing,
touching on the people who made the evening possible,
lauding our hostess and her three beautiful
grandchildren who appeared on stage as she introduced
her.
Another bravura performance. I’d
witnessed her skills at close range at the UN
International Conference on Population and Development
in Cairo in 1994 and the
UN Women's conference in Beijing in 1995 and on
other occasions in the US, including a speech she made
in Buffalo right after her election to the US Senate to
a large crowd of people who were likely not of her
party. In all cases she charmed and impressed.
Again, she covered the bases
well—the
Iraq fiasco,
health care reform, the need to help the struggling
middle class,
Katrina, etc. She got a huge ovation and stayed
around to shake hands until her hands must have felt the
dishpan would have been easier.
Why not? The take was
announced at $300,000—which, while not enough to offset
the
$850,000 her campaign had to return from Mr. Hsu,
was a banner evening. (Norman Hsu, a suspect in a
current campaign finance investigation, was convicted of
running a Ponzi scheme in 1992, since which time
he's been a fugitive. He's also an
immigrant entrepreneur, from Hong Kong.)
Problem: she made no mention of
immigration reform–either
patriotic or “comprehensive”.
I would respectfully remind
Hilary Clinton that all those costly reforms will
have a hard time getting funding against the continuing
importation of
legal and illegal aliens, as
business and the
ideological and
ethnic lobbies are urging.
But her support comes largely from
those groups.
Of course none of her colleagues are
right on
patriotic immigration reform either, Obama leading
the pack in his
ardor for "comprehensive" etc.
It leaves me, as a Democrat,
disappointed. I know it’s an imperfect world, but why
can't Hillary be as good on immigration as she is (in my
opinion) on
family planning and
choice. (And why can't good people like Buchanan and
Tancredo make sense on
family planning?)
In the end, it is all about the
numbers coming here and how we deal with the expected
glut—10,000
more refugees from Iraq is but the first tranche.
Woe for America if this greed and
the overlooking of the obvious continues.
Donald A. Collins [
email
him], is a freelance writer living in Washington DC and
a board member of FAIR, the Federation for American
Immigration Reform. His views are his own.