A new John McCain

 “McCain appears to be learning that Republicans won’t accept proposals that allow undocumented immigrants to gain legal status until the borders are secured.”

                     - Jim DeMint

The web helps us keep a close eye on our congressional delegation.  Here’s an article that just popped up in our inbox mentioning Senator Jim DeMint. He goes after McCain pretty hard on immigration.

But what’s the most interesting point of this story?  That McCain has been teaming up with Ted Kennedy and pissing off conservatives on immigration?  Or that Straight Talk Maverick McCain jumped ship on Kennedy because it was the smart thing to do when running for president?

Grassroots activists have been rumbling for years over McCain-Kennedy legislation.  The only thing conservatives hate more than amnesty for illegal aliens is Ted Kennedy.  It’s smart of McCain to jump ship now.

Or is it?

McCain is losing his maverick edge, no doubt.  Everyone sees it and the media has picked up on it over and over during the last month.  This has given Rudy Giuliani the ability to fill the maverick space once monopolized by McCain.  A man who would nearly tell someone to go to hell if they didn’t like something he did, now seems to run his campaign strictly by polls.

Remember this?

“If I’d have been invited to go to Bob Jones University , sure, I’d have gone! And I’d have told them, ‘Get out of the 16th century and into the 21st century. What you’re doing is racist and cruel!’ Instead — instead, Governor Bush went there and never said a word. I would never, ever do such a thing.”

But now McCain says he needs those evangelicals that he once called “agents of intolerance.”

Is this latest move just another example of a new John McCain who wants to backtrack on some old straight talk?  You tell us.

Here’s the article:

Kennedy-McCain partnership falters
Immigration bill on shelf amid campaign

 BOSTON GLOBE

By Rick Klein

March 22, 2007

WASHINGTON — Senators Edward M. Kennedy and John McCain have all but abandoned plans to cosponsor a comprehensive immigration reform bill this year, as McCain faces tough questions from conservatives on the presidential campaign trail about his support for immigrants’ rights.

Kennedy, frustrated by the slow progress of his negotiations with McCain, is instead considering filing a bill on his own, modeled largely on the measure endorsed by the Senate Judiciary Committee last year. McCain is continuing to talk to Kennedy about immigration proposals, but the Arizona Republican has not committed to supporting Kennedy’s approach.

 The erosion of the unlikely political partnership that brought the liberal Kennedy and the conservative McCain together on immigration suggests a tough road ahead for passing a sweeping immigration measure this year. Further complicating efforts to find consensus, a group of Republicans is working with the White House to draft an alternative bill.

McCain’s hesitancy about joining Kennedy on the same issue they worked together on in the previous Congress also speaks to an emerging dynamic in the Republican presidential race.

McCain has encountered anger from hard-line immigration foes on the campaign trail, particularly over an aspect in last year’s bill that would have allowed most undocumented immigrants to work toward citizenship. Former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney, one of McCain’s rivals for the GOP nomination, has been especially sharp in his condemnation of McCain’s approach to immigration.

Senator Jim DeMint, a South Carolina Republican who is supporting Romney’s candidacy, said McCain appears to be learning that Republicans won’t accept proposals that allow undocumented immigrants to gain legal status until the borders are secured.

“That’s an important position for the Republican Party,” DeMint said. “We’re certainly not going to start off with any kind of expanded visa program, or any kind of normalization of those who are here.”

A McCain spokeswoman said the senator has not deviated from his fundamental position on immigration. Though he and Kennedy remain at odds over key points, McCain continues to believe that the matter must be handled in a comprehensive measure that includes border security and addresses the estimated 12 million undocumented immigrants now in the United States.
“We would love to come to some sort of an agreement,” said Eileen McMenamin, a McCain spokeswoman. “There are places where they disagree, but the senator’s been really focused on getting some sort of workable solution.”

Indeed, McCain hasn’t changed his immigration rhetoric on the campaign trail. On Sunday in New Hampshire, he told reporters traveling on his campaign bus that he still supports the basic framework he has long described as vital to addressing the challenging of immigration.

“We have to have a comprehensive approach to reform, which means a temporary worker [program] as well as securing our borders, as well as addressing the 12 million people who are here illegally, in both in a comprehensive and humane fashion,” he said.

Kennedy, a Massachusetts Democrat, expressed confidence that immigration reform will move forward, even if McCain’s name isn’t attached to the bill. He added that he remains committed to working with McCain.

“We’ll have a bipartisan bill, and I think at the end of the day that Senator McCain will be part of it,” Kennedy said. “There’s still hope. . . . It’s never fast enough as far as I’m concerned, but we understand that time is not necessarily an advantage.”

Supporters of the bill acknowledge that the issue must be dealt with by this summer, since it will become politically untenable in an environment dominated by 2008 presidential politics.

Last year, the Senate passed a proposal — modeled on one introduced jointly by Kennedy and McCain — that included new border security measures as well as a temporary “guest worker” program, a longtime goal of the Bush administration. The measure also included provisions that would have given most undocumented immigrants a chance to work toward citizenship if they pay fines and back taxes, maintain steady employment and clean criminal records, and learn English.

But the bill died in the House, where conservative foes prevented it from coming up. This year, Kennedy and McCain had planned to jump-start the debate by reintroducing their bill, and indicated in recent weeks that their bill would be released imminently.

Their negotiations, however, stalled repeatedly, and were complicated by McCain’s travel on the presidential campaign, according to Senate aides.

Most recently, according to aides, McCain objected to a provision favored by Kennedy that would require guest workers to receive the prevailing wage for the industry and region they work in; a similar provision was part of last year’s bill.

The delay has frustrated Democrats, several of whom suggest privately that McCain is concerned about his standing among conservatives and does not want to again support a bill with Kennedy, a well-known liberal icon.

The failure of McCain and Kennedy to agree on a bill has complicated the legislative picture on Capitol Hill. Two House members, Democrat Luis V. Gutierrez of Illinois and Republican Jeff Flake of Arizona, were expected to unveil a proposal today that closely tracks Kennedy’s plan.

In the Senate, a group of Republicans has been meeting with Bush administration officials to craft an alternative proposal.


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