“Be wary of Rubio and his plan, two of President Obama’s top advisers told them”
In recent days, Rubio has quietly reached out to a number of immigrant advocates who are usually White House allies but have grown frustrated with some of the president’s policies. Some of the activists say they are open to Rubio’s effort — even though it would stop short of a provision in the Democratic-backed Dream Act to create a path to citizenship — because it would at least provide some relief to people at risk of being deported.
Rubio has not put his plan on paper, but his office describes it as an “alternative” to the Dream Act that would legalize certain young people who came to the United States while they were children. The measure would grant non-immigrant visas so qualified young people could remain in the United States for college or to serve in the military.
The plan puts Obama in a box. Democrats are reluctant to see Rubio’s efforts as anything other than a political gambit to repair his party’s tarnished image with Hispanics and boost his own profile as a potential vice-presidential pick or future White House contender.









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Citizenship is a lot to expect for breaking the law.
They should be happy with just being allowed to stay.
NeoKong on April 26, 2012 at 12:07 PM
And Obama’s
planframeworklip service was something different?Remember when the Democrats had 60 Senate seats? What did they pass?
forest on April 26, 2012 at 12:10 PM
Rubio’s plan is actually pretty sensible. The don’t get citizenship, but they can apply for it like anyone else. I would like to see him add the ARMS Act to it. If you serve this country’s armed forces I think you’ve shown that you’re committed to it.
cpaulus on April 26, 2012 at 12:12 PM
Latinos, read this and spread the word – McCain said last night that he approached Obama after the Giffords shooting to enact amnesty and Obama did nothing.
Obama said his son, had he one, would look like Trayvon…when in reality he’d look like George Zimmerman, or if the genes would play grandparents’ style, like his own white mother.
Hate him, don’t love him. He has done nothing for you, NADA.
Schadenfreude on April 26, 2012 at 12:12 PM
We do need to recognize children brought here illegally are a special case, including those children who grew up here and are of age now. In such cases I fully support a path to citizenship which would first identify such people and then place them on an accelerated path to citizenship, given the follow the law going forward.
Skwor on April 26, 2012 at 12:12 PM
Conservatives, watch Rubio like the plague.
Schadenfreude on April 26, 2012 at 12:13 PM
He said nothing wrong, You are letting your hatred of Romney cloud your judgement.
VegasRick on April 26, 2012 at 12:23 PM
Fact is that some kid who grew up here and is in college or serving in our military is probably a much more desirable resident than many others I can think of. That would be more along the sort of person I *want* to allow to stay.
I don’t even have a problem with “path to citizenship” after an honorable discharge from the military or repayment of any student loans. Not to say they are GIVEN citizenship, but allowed to begin the process if they have done a full tour in the armed services or have received a 4 year or more degree and repaid any student debt they may have incurred. That puts them light years ahead of folks applying “cold” from other countries.
crosspatch on April 26, 2012 at 12:24 PM
As a proponent of limited government, not passing legislation is a good thing. The less legislation, the better.
Dante on April 26, 2012 at 12:24 PM
“The purpose of the institutions we established, from the United Nations to the World Bank and the IMF was to spread peace and prosperity, not to assert narrow American interests,” said Sen. Rubio.
Uh…he’s right.
cpaulus on April 26, 2012 at 12:27 PM
“Marco Rubio is not representative of the Lahteeno community”
- Debbie Wasserman-Honky
CorporatePiggy on April 26, 2012 at 12:29 PM
agree. i think it will help raise the value of citizenship as well. maybe it’s like Bonhoeffer arguing against cheap grace. we’ve got a plague of cheap citizenship in the USA.
Steven McGregor on April 26, 2012 at 12:30 PM
Pair Rubio’s Dream Act with a nationwide Arizona law and e-verify and I’d be okay with it, but I couldn’t accept it without increased enforcement.
I’d just make sure that if one part of the law goes down in court, that the whole thing dies (to avoid danger of the enforcement part being struck down).
El_Terrible on April 26, 2012 at 12:31 PM
I totally agree. But there are people who are disappointed that the Democrats did nothing when they could have. We need to remind them that Obama lied to them an let them down.
forest on April 26, 2012 at 12:37 PM
Also pair it with the DEms and open borders Rs not having a say in the legislation , a thought out and pre tested plan to police and enforce the amnesty’s guidelines, some way to assure that the amnesty has a firm unchangable end date and a reasonable age cut off(not 35) …
A fantasy.
BoxHead1 on April 26, 2012 at 12:40 PM
There are only three rules to remember when putting together an immigration reform plan:
RULE 1) No Democrat ever has to propose anything regarding immigration reform;
RULE 2) Everything every Republican says about immigration reform will always be wrong, no matter what it is; and
RULE 3) There is no rule 3.
logis on April 26, 2012 at 1:31 PM