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Politics : ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION THE FIGHT TO KEEP OUR DEMOCRACY -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Tadsamillionaire who wrote (1375)1/23/2007 4:36:44 PM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 3197
 
Support grows to make English official

By Eric Pfeiffer
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published January 22, 2007

The push to make English the nation's official language is building
momentum, with a congressional bill on the horizon and seven states
pushing legislation to make English the official language or to
strengthen laws already in place.
"There's been such strong support," said Rep. Steve King, Iowa
Republican. "And it's gaining momentum."
Mr. King is expected next month to reintroduce the English Language
Unity Act, which seeks to make English the nation's official language.
However, he said that timetable had been postponed until House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi could complete the Democrats' "first 100 hours" agenda.
"Nancy Pelosi has us under martial law," he said.
"The states have been wonderful on this," said Jim Boulet Jr.,
executive director of English First, an organization that supports
making English the official language. "The problem isn't getting bills
passed, it's getting them enforced." Mr. Boulet described Mr. King's
bill as "a good first step."
In the last session of Congress, Mr. King drafted similar
legislation and counted 160 co-sponsors, placing the bill in the top 2
percent of co-sponsored legislation. Although control of Congress has
switched hands, the bill's advocates say the issue has broad, bipartisan
support. "We don't necessarily expect them to jump in and say they
support this unanimously," said Rob Toonkel, spokesman for U.S. English
Inc., a group that supports making English the official language.
The legislation would not bar private businesses or individuals from
using multilingual material, but it does seek to prevent federal funds
from being spent on such efforts.
Mr. King has long been an advocate of English-language laws. In
2002, as a state senator, Mr. King authored a successful bill making
English the official language in Iowa. The bill was signed by then-Gov.
Tom Vilsack, who is now a candidate for the Democratic presidential
nomination in 2008.
Mr. King on Jan. 10 filed a lawsuit in state district court against
Gov. Chet Culver and Secretary of State Michael Mauro, both Democrats,
for violating Iowa's English-language law. The lawsuit accuses Mr.
Culver, who served as secretary of state before running for governor,
and Mr. Mauro of illegally placing voter-registration forms and
absentee-ballot request forms on Iowa's secretary of state Web site in
foreign languages.
Meanwhile, English-language laws have been introduced by state
legislators in Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, New
Jersey and Oklahoma. Similar legislation is expected to be introduced in
other states before the end of the month. Culpeper County in Virginia
and Cabarrus County in North Carolina have introduced their own
English-language proposals as well.
Last month, voters in Arizona passed legislation making English the
state's official language by a margin of more than 2-to-1. "The people
have been well-ahead of the politicians on this one for a long time,"
Mr. Boulet said.
Although immigration legislation remains stalled in the halls of
Capitol Hill, some supporters of making English the official language
say that ambiguity has had unforeseen benefits. "[Immigration and
Naturalization Service] had a record number of people applying for
citizenship last year," Mr. Toonkel said.
The Department of Homeland Security's Citizenship and Immigration
Services said there was an 18 percent increase in requests for
citizenship applications during the first half of last year compared
with 2005. Similar surges have followed a tightening of illegal-alien
laws passed in states such as Arizona and California. After California
passed its Proposition 187 in 1996, a total of 378,014 persons were
naturalized. That was more than double the previous year's figure, when
136,727 persons were naturalized.
"This is the strongest push for official English legislation that I
have seen in the last 15 years," said U.S. English Chairman Mauro E.
Mujica. "I hope the jump-start that this issue has received will pay
dividends in the near future by making English the official language and
knocking down the linguistic barriers that divide our society."



To: Tadsamillionaire who wrote (1375)1/27/2007 11:46:01 AM
From: American Spirit  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 3197
 
The problem with the Minutemen is that they're a magnet for racists and psychopaths, although I'm sure many of the group are sincere. What some of them want is the right to kill, to hunt Mexicans like animals. Might even attract some serial killer wannabes.

Let me tell you, you start arresting corporate CEO's for hiring illegals, like the head of Walmart or something, and you'll see things change quickly.