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Politics : FREE AMERICA

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From: goldworldnet5/18/2006 2:43:17 PM
   of 14758
 
Bush Backs 370-Mile Border Fence
By NEDRA PICKLER, Associated Press Writer
48 minutes ago

news.yahoo.com

President Bush, traveling to the Southwest to witness first-hand federal efforts to control immigration, was described Thursday as supportive of a 370-mile long fence to seal off areas of the U.S.-Mexico border that are popular crossing points.

Bush's position was outlined by White House press secretary Tony Snow as the president flew to Yuma, Ariz. for his inspection visit.

Bush had signaled opposition to such widespread fencing in the past, but his support for the plan approved Wednesday by the Senate showed how eager he is to win over Republican conservatives who want to take a tougher approach toward keeping illegal immigrants out.

"We don't think you fence off the entire border," Snow told reporters aboard Air Force One. But, he added, "there are places when fences are appropriate."

The Senate was following the lead of the House, which passed a bill last year that would have constructed 700 miles of fencing.

Bush has talked repeatedly about building fences along the border in urban areas, but told CNN Espanol in March that "it's impractical to fence off the border."

Snow had said Wednesday that the White House would not comment on the fence proposal in the Senate, but he told reporters Thursday that "we supported the amendment" that included the fencing and was sponsored by Sen. Jeff Sessions (news, bio, voting record), R-Ala.

Yuma is the embodiment of the system that Bush frequently describes, where desperate people risk their lives for a chance to earn decent wages from U.S. employers hungry for their labor.

The president was to take a tour of the border, then give a speech aimed at driving home Monday night's prime-time address calling for National Guard troops to help strengthen the border while giving illegal immigrants in the United States a chance at citizenship and allowing more foreigners to enter the country legally to work. He also planned a round of interviews with all the television networks to help sell his ideas, which face tough opposition in Congress.

The Yuma economy is heavily reliant on agriculture, and farmers are eager to employ immigrants at low prices to harvest fresh crops that are increasingly in demand across the country. The remote outpost is also one of the hottest places in the country, and growing number of Mexicans die each year trying to make it across as Border Patrols increase along the 2,000-mile dividing line.

The problem has inflamed passions on both sides and divided the state's politicians who do not all agree with Bush's proposed solution. The governor, Janet Napolitano, is a Democrat but agrees with Bush that the United States should allow more foreigners to have temporary work permits to enter the country while strengthening security at the border.

But others, like Republican Rep. J.D. Hayworth (news, bio, voting record), wants to enforce the border before even considering any plan for guest worker permits. Hayworth rode with Bush on Air Force One and said he was giving the president a copy of his book on immigration, which proposes building a fence along the U.S.-Mexico border, using armed forces to help patrol the region and denying citizenship to the U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants.

Arizona "is ground zero," Hayworth said, "when you consider nightly between 6,000 and 6,500 illegals attempt to cross our border and of that group, between 4,000 and 4,500 make it on a nightly basis. That is why there is such concern."

Some of those who don't make it are caught by the Border Patrol, while others lose their lives with daytime temperatures as high as 120 degrees. At the Yuma station, which oversees 62 miles of the border, authorities said agents are catching 300 to 450 immigrants a day, which is comparable to last year's numbers. But they also are seeing unusual spikes, including 840 on a single day in March. Deaths in the Yuma sector hit a record 51 in 2005, up from 36 in 2004 and 15 in 2003.

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