Written By: John Hawkins
Texas is an agriculture-friendly
border state, and its population is roughly 37% Hispanic. In a state like that,
where the Texas version of the DREAM Act was genuinely popular on both sides of
the aisle, you can’t realistically expect a governor to compile an
ideologically pure record on illegal immigration.
So with that in mind, the real
question becomes what can we expect from Rick Perry
on the issue if he becomes President? That question had yet to be answered —
until today. I was pleased to get an opportunity to do an in-depth written
interview with Rick Perry that covers his position on illegal immigration. If
you’re wondering where Rick Perry stands, after reading this interview, you
will know.
1. You supported the Texas version
of the DREAM ACT which incidentally, was very popular in your state. It passed
27-3 in the Senate and 130-2 in the House. However, you would not support the
DREAM ACT nationally if you became President of the United States. Why is that?
The federal DREAM Act is an amnesty
bill, and I strongly oppose amnesty. The Texas educational residency bill was
vastly different.
Because the federal government has
failed in its basic duty to protect our borders, states are forced to deal with
illegal immigrant issues.
In Texas, we had to deal with the
children of illegal immigrants residing in our state and attending our schools,
as the federal government requires states to educate these children through the
public school system. Lawmakers in Texas – indisputably one of the most
conservative states in America – were virtually unanimous in their decision.
The Legislature determined the
payment of in-state college tuition is available to all students who have lived
in Texas for at least three years and graduated from a public high school. If
you meet those requirements, you pay in-state tuition, whether you relocated
from Oklahoma, Idaho, Canada or Mexico. The only difference is that Texas
residents who aren’t documented must be on the path to pursue U.S. citizenship
to be allowed to pay in-state tuition.
There were a number of reasons the
bill received widespread support among conservatives. Importantly, it has never
had a cost to Texas taxpayers. In fact, our institutions of higher learning
would actually lose tens of millions of dollars in lost tuition payments if the
law were repealed.
And it would lower the odds that
these students would receive subsidized health care or end up in prison.
Protecting taxpayers was a serious concern, given that a Supreme Court decree
already requires taxpayers to pay for K-12 education for undocumented students.
2. In the last debate, you said, “If
you say that we should not educate children who have come into our state for no
other reason than they’ve been brought there by no fault of their own, I don’t
think you have a heart.” A lot of conservatives oppose the DREAM ACT nationally
because they believe it incentivizes illegal aliens to bring their children to
this country and they felt that was a slap at them. Can you further clarify
what you meant by that comment?
I too oppose the federal DREAM Act
and will oppose it as President. Because the federal government has failed to
secure the border, states have had to act. In Texas we have sent Texas Rangers
to the border, spent hundreds of millions to fight border crime, outlawed
driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants and passed Voter ID. On the issue of
all Texas residents paying in-state tuition, I regret the comment from the
debate. It was a poor choice of words, and it wasn’t fair to those who disagree
with the policy.
3. Now you worked to outlaw
sanctuary cities in Texas. Tell us why that is.
I called for abolishing sanctuary
cities in my last State of the State address, and made it an emergency item for
the Legislature. I’m a firm believer in giving law enforcement the discretion
they need to do their job. Sanctuary city policies handcuff law enforcement
officers in order to further a political agenda.
4. You signed a bill preventing
illegal immigrants from receiving drivers’ licenses. Why did you do that?
I signed that bill because getting a
driver’s license is a privilege, not a right. It just doesn’t make sense to me
to extend that privilege to individuals who are here illegally.
Additionally, I vetoed a bill that
would have allowed the use of a matricula consular, which is an ID card used by
the Mexican government, to get a driver’s license in Texas.
Driver’s licenses are used for a
host of activities besides driving, like making financial transactions,
boarding airplanes, renting vehicles and proving your identity to government
authorities. The Department of Homeland Security has expressed concern that the
matricula consular is particularly susceptible to fraud, which means you can’t
rely on it to prove someone’s identity. So if you allow someone to use it to
get a driver’s license, you’ve got some pretty serious homeland security
implications.
5. Now, you came out against
Arizona’s illegal immigration law, SB 1070 — although, in your defense, you
signed on to support the law when the Obama Administration sued Arizona. Do you
think the Obama Administration was right to sue Arizona over its immigration
law?
I support the right of each state to
come up with its own plan to address the federal government’s failure on border
security and illegal immigration.
The federal government has failed to
secure the border, and states are left fending for themselves. States have
every right under the 10th Amendment to pass laws and make decisions for
themselves. That’s why Texas supported Arizona when the Obama Administration
sued to overturn Arizona law.
If Washington politicians don’t like
the way state leaders are cleaning up their mess, they should quit complaining
and pick up a broom. If they just did their job securing the border in the
first place, states wouldn’t be forced to develop with their own policies.
In Texas, our efforts have focused
on stopping the illegal flow of narcotics and people before they cross the
border, rather than once they get here. It’s the philosophy that an ounce of
prevention is worth a pound of cure.
We’ve spent about $400 million of
our state tax dollars to put more boots on the ground, more helicopters in the
sky and better intelligence in the hands of law enforcement.
And we’ve seen real results. Our
surge in manpower has created major disruptions for the drug cartels and human
smuggling rings. We’ve seized millions of pounds of drugs, taken 3,500 illegal
weapons off the street and made America safer.
Securing the border and enforcing
immigration laws are the federal government’s constitutional responsibility,
and it’s time for Washington to do its job.
In the meantime, I respect the right
of all states to develop their own solutions, whether they use the Texas model
or the Arizona model. I applaud my fellow governors who are showing leadership
on this issue, because President Obama certainly has not.
6. You’ve talked a lot about cutting
spending, but do you think we should be willing to spend more money to increase
the number of border patrol agents and ICE agents doing interior enforcement?
Absolutely. Border security is a
federal responsibility. Our greatest need is more boots on the ground, and
America needs a president who will stop talking about securing the border and
finally do it.
In Texas, we found a way to commit
$400 million to border security in recent years, even when we faced tough
budgets. In Washington, it’s not a question of means; it’s a question of will.
I have no doubt we can find the
funds necessary to increase manpower, technology and fencing on the border. In
fact, cutting bureaucracy at the EPA would probably be a great place to start.
We just need a leader who will set
the right priorities. I made it happen in Texas and I’ll do it again if I’m
president.
7. During the debate, Rick Santorum
said the following, “[Rick Perry] gave a speech in 2001 where he talked about
bi-national health insurance between Mexico and Texas! I mean, I don’t even
think Barack Obama would be for bi-national health insurance! So, I think he’s
very weak on this issue of American sovereignty.” Looking at the issue in more
detail, it doesn’t look like you were actually proposing joint American/Mexican
national health insurance, so much as deregulation that would allow private
insurers, if they wished, to cover people on both sides of the border. Can you
talk about what you were driving at with that proposal?
In Texas, we are always looking for
innovative ways to improve the delivery and cost of healthcare. Texas reviewed
the issue, but never pursued it. This was back in 2001 and you’re exactly right
that it was about freeing up consumers and private insurers from government
regulation.
The idea was similar to allowing
states to enter into compacts or allowing health insurance products to be sold
across state lines. I think what I mentioned in that 2001 speech was that the
legislature was conducting a “feasibility study.” Turns out it wasn’t feasible
to implement, so nothing ever came of it.
But I’m glad we weren’t afraid to
take a look at the idea, and let it stand or fall on its own merits. I think
people are tired of stereotypical politicians who sit around worrying about
what opponents are going to criticize in the next election. They’re always the
first ones to abandon their principles.
In any case, I do agree that
President Obama probably wouldn’t have been too keen on the idea of empowering
healthcare consumers to make better health and economic decisions for
themselves.
8. Obviously you don’t build a fence
across every square inch of the border or you’ll be going across roads or
blocking farmers from being able to get to water in some places. That’s an
issue you’ve brought up a lot and it makes sense although you’ve also
explicitly said that you support strategic fencing in certain areas. That being
said, Congress has already passed a bill to build a border fence for 854 miles
across the border. In fact, it was supposed to be completed in 2009, but we’re
still not making any significant progress on it under the Obama Administration.
If Rick Perry becomes President of the United States, would that fence on the
border be completed in your first term?
I have long been a proponent of
strategic fencing because it is a critical component of border security, and it
works when used in the right places.
I think what caused the hang up was
that after it was passed, it was amended to give Homeland Security complete
discretion on how, when and whether the fence ever gets built. Obviously with
this president, that means it will never be completed.
If I’m elected, I will direct my
Secretary of Homeland Security to expedite construction of strategic fencing
along the border, especially in high traffic areas where manpower alone is
insufficient to do the job.
But it’s important to remember that
fencing is only one component of an overall border security strategy. A fence
is only as secure as it is manned.
That’s why I would increase manpower
on the border, starting with thousands of National Guard and border patrol
agents, and I’d also make greater use of unmanned aerial vehicles to help
gather real-time law enforcement intelligence.
We know for a fact that increased
manpower is effective, because we’ve proved it in Texas with our $400 million
border security effort.
9. You’ve been very critical of
E-Verify, the limited system the government is using to verify Social Security
numbers of employees. Admittedly, E-verify has been poorly run by the
government, but without some kind of system in place to keep employers from
unwittingly hiring illegals, it is not possible to fix our illegal immigration
problem. So, would you like to get rid of E-Verify and if so, what would you
replace it with?
I agree that some kind of electronic
verification system is needed so we can make sure employers comply with the law
not to hire illegal immigrants. E-Verify is a federal government created and
run program, and as a result there have been a number of problems with it so
far. The Department of Homeland Security estimated the system could fail to
identify more than half of all illegal immigrants.
But just because it has problems
doesn’t mean we should throw employee verification out. It means we should make
it work. Employee verification needs to be accurate so American citizens aren’t
denied jobs based on bad data and undocumented immigrants don’t slip through
the system. And it needs to be less cumbersome for employers to use, so it’s
not costing them money they could be using to create jobs.
So as president, I’d work to put in
place an E-Verify system that’s more accurate, less burdensome and really
delivers the results we need it to.
10. Most Democrats and even some
Republicans favor comprehensive immigration reform with the idea being that we
would create a path to citizenship for illegal aliens while we put new security
measures into place at the same time. The fear many people have is that we’d
get the citizenship for illegal aliens, but the security measures would be
slow-walked or never put into place at all. Would you support comprehensive
immigration reform or do you believe we need to insist on a “security first”
position, which means that we secure the border and put some kind of system in
place to keep illegal aliens from working before we start discussing what would
happen with illegal aliens that are already here?
The debate on immigration reform is
meaningless until the federal government secures the border. There’s just no
point in passing new immigration laws when we can’t even enforce the ones we’ve
got. Once our borders are secure and we’ve fixed the problem with visa
“overstays,” then we can seriously address our broken immigration system. But
step one is to secure that border so we have the ability to enforce the law. Cross Posted from Right Wing News