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Go Hoosiers! Indiana Sends Congress the Bill for the Cost of Illegal Aliens

2:14 pm in american immigration reform, Border/Immigration, bridge to nowhere, budget director, federation for american immigration reform, hoosiers, illegal aliens, immigration law, immigration status, indiana bills congress cost of illegal aliens, indiana illegal immigration, matricula consular card, prison costs, spotlight, state welfare, welfare benefits, welfare costs, welfare fraud by TPT Admin

Indiana Sends Congress the Bill for the Cost of Illegal Aliens

Indiana is sick and tired of illegal aliens, and sicker still of the Federal failure to do something about them.

Last year they passed their own version of Arizona’s immigration law – which included mandatory E-Verify for all businesses, with penalties, verification of immigration status when passing out state welfare benefits, and a ban on the acceptance of Mexico’s fraud-friendly “Matricula Consular” card. Part of the law was blocked by a Federal judge, but the bulk remains in effect.

Part of that law also requires the state to calculate the annual cost of illegal aliens to the state – and bill Washington, D.C. for it. This year’s cost? $130.9 million.

Budget Director Adam Horst sent Congress a bill for the amount Friday. Congress is not expected to act on the request, however. It’s not like Indiana is asking to fund a bridge to nowhere or a Chinese wind turbine company.

Horst estimated $110.6 million of the state’s illegal immigrant costs have been for K-12 education. He estimated prison costs at $12.3 million and welfare costs at nearly $8 million.

And officials acknowledge that this estimate may in fact understate the actual cost by as much as 5 times! This, because school officials are not permitted to ask the immigration status of children in school, as Alabama’s HB56 mandates. Nor have officials yet obtained a recent estimate of illegal alien welfare access under the new law, or estimate welfare fraud or identity theft costs by illegal aliens. and most significantly, the figures do not take into account the anchor babies of illegal aliens and their massive cost to the state.

Our good friends at the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) have crunched those numbers, and their estimate for Indiana (2009) was a staggering $608.5 million – for a single state!

In all, FAIR estimates that illegal aliens cost the United States a mind-boggling $113 BILLION each and every year – far more than the annual estimated cost of the entire ObamaCare program. Gateway states like Arizona are hit especially hard, sunk by illegals to the tune of $2.5 billion a year.

In the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling on S.B. 1070, Justice Anthony Kennedy asserted that immigration was to be governed by Federal laws, based upon the Constitution’s granting of the power of “naturalization” to the Congress.

However Kennedy’s ruling has a clear flip side, another section of the Constitution that – if the Court compelled its enforcement – would make laws  like Arizona’s and Indiana’s completely unnecessary…Article IV, Section 4:

“The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government,and shall protect each of them against invasion….”

We urge every other state to do what Indiana has done, and send their bills for illegal aliens to Washington, D.C. – but not to stop there. They need to SUE the Federal government for these costs, and to force the Feds to obey the charge our Founders commanded – SECURE THE BORDERS. Kennedy’s ruling sets a clear precedent to support such lawsuits.

Tell YOUR state representatives and Governor to demand Washington bureaucrats do their jobs to protect the states from illegal aliens, drug and human smugglers, gangs and “OTM” terrorists – secure the borders now, or pay the price.

You can contact your state officials HERE.


If YOU stand against illegal immigration and want to see the border secured, the rule of law upheld and amnesty for illegals stopped, then put your name where your heart is, and join the 150,000 who have signed our petition…

Source: Stand With Arizona.com

Gov. Brewer: Federal Gov’t Is Telling Arizona To ‘Drop Dead’

2:16 pm in AZ News, federal gov, foxnews com, Headlines, immigration law, Local News, supreme court by PinkTeaPatriot

Gov. Jan Brewer reflects on the Supreme Court’s ruling on Arizona’s immigration law and what’s next in fight against illegals.

U.S. Supreme Court strikes down employment provision in Arizona immigration law

10:57 am in arizona law, AZ News, barnes thornburg, criminal misdemeanor, criminal sanctions, federal immigration, Headlines, immigration issues, immigration law, immigration reform and control act, Local News, supreme court strikes, undocumented immigrants by PinkTeaPatriot

 

By: lexology.com   Kaitlyn N. Jakubowski

The Supreme Court has ruled in Arizona v. United States, Dkt No. 11-182 that Arizona’s S.B. 1070, enacted in 2010 in reaction to increasing undocumented immigration into the State, is largely preempted by federal law. The decision, issued by Justice Kennedy, considered four provisions of the 2010 Arizona law and struck down three, including Section 5(C), which made it a state criminal misdemeanor for undocumented immigrants to apply for employment or work in the state.

The Court held that the federal Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) preempted Section 5(C) of the Arizona law. While the IRCA imposes criminal and civil penalties on employers that violate the law, it imposes only civil penalties on undocumented immigrants who apply for or engage in unauthorized work. The Court determined that Congress clearly intended not to impose criminal sanctions on undocumented immigrants through IRCA and therefore Section 5(C) of the Arizona law conflicted with federal law.

This decision is likely to affect other states that have enacted similar laws modeled after S.B. 1070. Consequently, the decision could prove to be beneficial for employers, who may be subject to less state regulation with respect to immigration issues in hiring.

Read More: Barnes & Thornburg LLP           

 

Jan Brewer: Arizona to enforce ‘show me your papers’ policy ASAP

6:24 pm in arizona gov, AZ Governor Jan Brewer, AZ News, Border/Immigration, Featured, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigration law, immigration status, jan brewer, registration papers, SB 1070, sponsor of Arizona’s SB 1070, states supreme court, status checks by PinkTeaPatriot

Jan Brewer

By Paloma Esquivel
Posted: June 25, 2012

PHOENIX — Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer said that police agencies can immediately begin enforcing the controversial “show me your papers” provision of the state’s landmark immigration law — the section that was upheld by the U.S Supreme Court.

“We will move forward instructing law enforcement to begin practicing what the United States Supreme Court has upheld,” Brewer said at a news  conference Monday.

Justices struck down three key provisions of the Arizona law cracking down on illegal immigrants — including a requirement that made it a crime for certain immigrants to fail to carry registration papers — saying that the federal government has the sole power to enforce laws against illegal immigration.

But the court let stand a section that requires police to check the immigration status of any person who has already been stopped for another law enforcement reason, such as a traffic violation. These status checks should not “result in prolonged detention,” Kennedy said.

Brewer, a Republican, cast the decision on the law, SB 1070, as a vindication for Arizona, saying “the heart of the bill was upheld.”

“Today is a day when the key components of our efforts to protect the citizens of Arizona — to take up the fight against illegal immigration in a balanced and constitutional way — has unanimously been vindicated by the highest court in the land,” she said.

But some police chiefs in Arizona and other states said that enforcing the Section 2(B) provision of the law could undermine local law enforcement.

Read More: LATimes.com

Is President Obama’s Dream Order a Legal Nightmare?

7:43 am in arizona immigration law case, arizona laws, Border/Immigration, constitution of the united states, Department of Homeland Security, executive decision, federal immigration, illegal aliens, immigration law, immigration laws, immigration policy, law case, legal nightmare, political expediency, spotlight, supreme court decision, The President by danmillerinpanama

The Executive Decision not to enforce Federal immigration laws
in order to give President Obama a badly needed political boost
may run afoul of the soon-to-be-released Supreme Court decision in the
Arizona Immigration Law case.

President Obama’s own Nightmare Dream Act

On June 15th, President Obama grandly announced that because the Congress had declined to pass a “Dream Act” granting immunity from prosecution to members of specific groups of illegal aliens, he had taken it upon himself to do it. Doing it just temporarily was fine for his purposes, because the election is less than five months away. Less than a year before, he had told a gathering of la Raza people about his unhappiness that he could not do what he just did, because of the laws and Constitution of the United States, which he had sworn to uphold, forbade him. Even so, he said that doing what he wanted to do was “very tempting.”

Having surrendered to political expediency temptation, President Obama on June 15th attempted to ensure that at least eight hundred thousand illegal aliens will be granted protection from deportation and other “rights” inconsistent with Federal law simply because President Obama so desires. As suggested below, the Supreme Court may well have something relevant to say when it decides, later this month, what to do about the Arizona immigration law appeal currently before it. There seems to be much anticipation that the Court will uphold the Arizona laws in major part and hence reverse a 9th Circuit decision holding that they had unlawfully trod in an area preempted by Federal law.

There was great joy in Obamaville on June 15th. Katherine Archuleta, National Political Director, Obama for America dispatched an e-mail. It said,

Thanks to our president, this nation’s immigration policy just became more fair and more just.

Effective immediately, the Department of Homeland Security is taking steps to ensure that young, undocumented immigrants who were brought here as children by their parents, and who have followed the law since then, will be able to request temporary relief from deportation proceedings — and will be allowed to apply for authorization to work in this country.

They’re a group that we’ve come to call the “Dreamers” — and today, the country they love is telling them they should be able to dream as big as they want.

For years, the President has called on Congress to make common-sense fixes to our broken immigration system. They haven’t. So he did.

. . . .

Congress still has time to pass the DREAM Act. And if they do, policies like today’s will no longer be necessary.

We are not giving up on this issue.

Stand up and support the President today — and help send the message that this first big step must be followed by a real, permanent solution from Congress:

http://my.barackobama.com/Dreamers (Bold emphasis in original, italic emphasis added.)

This is not simply a matter “fairness” or even of the ordinary use of prosecutorial discretion, applied in individual cases, not to prosecute because the available evidence is weak or for other sufficient reasons. It establishes broad criteria for the exercise of discretion en masse to eight hundred thousand or more people of specified classes; thereby arguably discriminating against others. It also requires the Department of Homeland Security and other agencies to establish new procedures to implement the new policy. How soon will the new policy become effective?

The Secretary of Homeland Security has ordered Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to do the following:

  1. To those that appear qualified, ICE and CBP should immediately exercise their discretion to stop deportation, on an individual basis.
  2. There is no application available yet. It will take at least at least 60 days to put the program into effect.
  3. Do not trust unlicensed lawyers and Notarios. Be clear, there is nothing to file now.
  4. ICE is directed to begin implementing this process within 60 days of the date of this memorandum.
  5. ICE is also instructed to immediately begin the process of deferring action against individuals who meet the above criteria whose cases have already been identified through the ongoing review of pending cases before the Executive Office for Immigration Review.

President Obama, in his desire to recover from an electoral sinking feeling brought on by his stagnant and staggering economy, increasing perceptions that in international relations he is a wuss and other political circumstances not to his liking, attempted an end-run around the Congress for what can not fairly be seen as for other than immediate political purposes. Even if raw reelection politics had nothing to do with his decision, his actions still overstepped the constitutional separation of powers between the Legislative and Executive branches. To implement that end-run, the Secretary of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) employees, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) employees and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) employees now have lots of new work to do — all in derogation of Federal immigration law as previously established by the Congress in legislation signed into law by a President. Perhaps the agencies have enough money created or saved from various legislative funding authorizations. If not, maybe they can find ways to tap into President Obama’s campaign funds; that would be “fair” and therefore consistent with the stated bases for President Obama’s unilateral action. It would also be consistent with that action because it would also be an illegal action.

What might the Supreme Court’s soon-to-be-released Arizona immigration law decision mean?

When the Supreme Court decides this month what to do with the April 11, 2011 decision of the 9th Circuit in United States v. Arizona, whatever it says may well have implications for President Obama’s most recent usurpation. Since the Arizona immigration laws were passed in large part to enforce existing Federal immigration laws the Obama Administration had chosen not to enforce, the Court may have to touch upon some of the principles involved in President Obama’s June 15th announcement. Might his announcement have been in anticipation of, and an attempt to do an end run around, that decision? Governor Brewer thinks so. “Should the justices uphold the law as it was originally passed, Brewer says the president’s decision could undercut the bill’s effectiveness.” Possibly, but the Supreme Court may also undercut President Obama’s usurpation.

In United States v. Arizona, the Federal appellate court affirmed District Judge Bolton’s decision holding the then new Arizona immigration statutes unconstitutional on the ground of Federal preemption. I wrote here about the 9th Circuit decision and, perhaps of greater interest for present purposes, a rather stinging “concurring” opinion of Judge Bea. Reviewing that article written over a year ago made it quite easy to write this article.

Judge Bea’s was a great opinion, portions of which are quoted below. He challenged the Humpty Dumpty linguistics of the majority.

The majority has apparently mastered its Lewis Carroll:
“I don’t know what you mean by ‘glory,’ ” Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. “Of course you don’t –
till I tell you. I meant ‘there’s a nice knock-down argument for you!’”
“But ‘glory’ doesn’t mean ‘a nice knockdown argument,’ ” Alice objected.
“When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful
tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.”
“The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.”
“The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master — that’s all.”

Judge Bea then pointed out that the majority’s interpretation of legislative intent had attributed to the Congress the intent of bureaucrats later charged with enforcing Federal immigration laws. That would have required the Congress to have had some previously undiscovered capacity for prescience enabling it to divine and approve later executive department interpretations. Judge Bea quite correctly observed:

It is Congress’s intent we must value and apply, not the intent of the Executive Department, the Department of Justice, or the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Moreover, it is the enforcement of immigration laws that this case is about, not whether a state can decree who can come into the country, what an alien may do while here, or how long an alien can stay in this country. (Italic emphasis in original, bold emphasis added.)

He continued,

The majority also finds that state officers reporting illegal aliens to federal officers, Arizona would interfere with ICE’s [U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement] “priorities and strategies.” Maj. Op. at 4824. It is only by speaking in such important-sounding abstractions — “priorities and strategies” — that such an argument can be made palatable to the unquestioning. How can simply informing federal authorities of the presence of an illegal alien, which represents the full extent of Section 2(B)’s limited scope of state-federal interaction, possibly interfere with federal priorities and strategies — unless such priorities and strategies are to avoid learning of the presence of illegal aliens? What would we say to a fire station which told its community not to report fires because such information would interfere with the fire station’s “priorities and strategies” for detecting and extinguishing fires?

The majority’s arguments regarding how any of the state officers’ actions spelled out in Section 2(B) could interfere with federal immigration enforcement is consistent with only one premise: the complaining federal authorities do not want to enforce the immigration laws regarding the presence of illegal aliens, and do not want any help from the state of Arizona that would pressure federal officers to have to enforce those immigration laws. With respect, regardless what may be the intent of the Executive, I cannot accept this premise as accurately expressing the intent of Congress. (Italic emphasis added.)

Here is another point that seems pertinent: One of the bases upon which the 9th Circuit decided in favor of Federal preemption was that there was substantial foreign opposition to the then new Arizona laws. Much of that may well have been cultivated by statements of President Obama and Attorney General Holder disparaging the laws, even before they had bothered to read them. Now, of course, Mexican President Calderon (he correctly characterized it as an “unprecedented” move) and others are very happy with President Obama’s action. Perhaps they are as unfamiliar with the Constitution and laws of the United States as we are with theirs. Judge Bea wrote,

The majority fails to identify a federal foreign relation policy which establishes the United States must avoid “spillover effects,” if that term is meant to describe displeasure by foreign countries with the United States’ immigration policies. The majority would have us believe that Congress has provided the Executive with the power to veto any state law which happens to have some effect on foreign relations, as if Congress had not weighed that possible effect in enacting laws permitting state intervention in the immigration field. To the contrary, here Congress has established — through its enactment of statutes such as 8 U.S.C. §§ 1357(g)(10), 1373(c), and 1644 — a policy which encourages the free flow of immigration status information between federal and local governments. Arizona’s law embraces and furthers this federal policy; any negative effect on foreign relations caused by the free flow of immigration status information between Arizona and federal officials is due not to Arizona’s law, but to the laws of Congress. Second, the Executive’s desire to appease foreign governments’ complaints cannot override Congressionally mandated provisions — as to the free flow of immigration status information between states and federal authorities — on grounds of a claimed effect on foreign relations any more than could such a foreign relations claim override Congressional statues for (1) who qualifies to acquire residency in the United States, 8 U.S.C. § 1154, or (2) who qualifies to become a United States citizen, 8 U.S.C. § 1421 et seq. (Italic emphasis added)

Presumably, President Obama’s desire to appease his domestic constituency as well as foreign governments cannot override Congressionally mandated provisions either; which is what President Obama’s recent usurpation does.

Finally, the majority errs in finding that the threat of all 50 states layering their own immigration rules on top of federal law weighs in favor of preemption. In Buckman, the Supreme Court stated: “As a practical matter, complying with the FDA’s detailed regulatory regime in the shadow of 50 States’ tort regimes will dramatically increase the burdens facing potential applicants burdens not contemplated by Congress in enacting the FDCA and the MDA.” 531 U.S. at 350 (emphasis added). I fail to see how Congress could have failed to contemplate that states would make use of the very statutory framework that Congress itself enacted. Congress created the Law Enforcement Support Center “to provide alien status determination support to federal, state, and local law enforcement on a 24-hours-a-day, seven-days-a-week basis.” Congress also obligated ICE to respond to all immigration status inquiries from state and local authorities. 8 U.S.C. § 1373(c). In light of this, all 50 states enacting laws for inquiring into the immigration status of suspected illegal aliens is desired by Congress, and weighs against preemption. (Emphasis in original.)

President Obama’s decision to himself obviate existing Federal laws on immigration and immigration enforcement presents the inside of the glove on the outside of which Judge Bea wrote. The Arizona case involved Federal preemption of State laws; President Obama’s executive decision involves Executive preemption of Federal laws that the Congress had intended to be enforced and that presidents had signed into law. Should the Supreme Court agree with Judge Bea, and hold that the Arizona laws furthered rather than unconstitutionally preempted Federal immigration law which the Executive branch had improperly used discretion — not granted it by the Congress — to obviate, it will be difficult to argue that Executive preemption of Congressional authority by refusing to enforce those same Federal laws is unobjectionable. On the other hand, should the Court hold that the Arizona law was preempted by Federal law and hence invalid, it will be difficult to argue with a straight face that the Executive can properly preempt those same Federal laws by doing precisely what he had said less than a year before he could not do without violating the laws and Constitution he had sworn to uphold. In either event, it may be quite difficult to argue that the reelection of a sitting President is a sufficiently important Federal goal to justify such a presidential action.

Lawsuit against the Obama Administration?

Congressman Steve King has stated that he may sue the Obama administration.

“I expect to bring a lawsuit against the president of the United States to suspend his executive order,” said Mr. King, in a telephone interview with The Des Moines Register, adding that he did not know when he would file the lawsuit and that a group of conservative lawyers are already organizing in support of him.

Although the Supreme Court’s decision in the Arizona immigration law case may provide quite useful points for Congressman King’s use, there is at least one big problem that transcends substance: standing. That is rather a convoluted requirement. Briefly explained here, it is

the term for the ability of a party to demonstrate to the court sufficient connection to and harm from the law or action challenged to support that party’s participation in the case. In the United States, the current doctrine is that a person cannot bring a suit challenging the constitutionality of a law unless the plaintiff can demonstrate that the plaintiff is (or will imminently be) harmed by the law. Otherwise, the court will rule that the plaintiff “lacks standing” to bring the suit, and will dismiss the case without considering the merits of the claim of unconstitutionality.

Although Mr. King is the vice chairman of the House Immigration Subcommittee, that may well not be deemed sufficient to give him any greater standing to seek judicial review of the matter than any private citizen would have on the ground that the harm done to him is no greater than that done to anyone else. No matter how the Supreme Court decides the Arizona case, it will be interesting to see how Mr. King attempts to show sufficient standing to argue the matter in court.

First published at Dan Miller’s Blog.

Photoshopped anti-Flake ad: Dirty politics or fair game?

5:35 pm in congressman jeff flake, dirty politics, Elections, fair game, game source, immigration law, Jeff Flake, negative ads, political circles, real truth, senate campaign by PinkTeaPatriot

Source FoxNews.com

By: Dan Spindle

Posted: June 9th, 2012

A recent ad by the Wil Cardon campaign is slamming Jeff Flake, and it’s bringing up some questions.

In politics, what is off limits and what is fair game? What is okay as far as manipulation in photographic images to get a point across to the public?

Even for politics, does that cross the line?

If you watch any amount of television any hour of the day, no doubt you know who Wil Cardon is. He’s running for Senate and he wants you to believe a vote for his Republican rival — Congressman Jeff Flake — is a vote for President Obama.

Cardon ad: “Flake joined Barack Obama in criticizing SB 1070 Arizona’s immigration law.”

The image has a lot of people, especially the guys at FirstStrategic Public Relations, talking.

“I don’t recall very many joint appearances between Congressman Flake and President Obama…” says Barry Dill from FirstStrategic.

And that’s the catch. The photo is actually two photos — something the Flake campaign pointed out in a new ad.

Flake ad: “The photo Cardon needed for his attack ad didn’t exist so he decided to Photoshop it.”

“Negative ads work but they only work when they’re truthful,” says Dill.

Congressman Jeff Flake’s campaign told us the ad was more than misleading, and they’ve essentially been forced to fire back.

“Even in political circles that crosses a line and that’s exactly what he did here, it’s just another pattern of dishonesty,” says Steve Voler, Flake Senate Campaign.

While no one in Wil Cardon’s camp could appear on camera, they told us they used the images to demonstrate the similarity of Congressman Flake and the president’s positions on amnesty and that: “The pictures aren’t the point. The voters of Arizona deserve to know the real truth: For 12 years, Congressman Jeff Flake has stood beside liberals in Washington in supporting amnesty.”

He just hasn’t stood by them literally.

“If you can’t trust him to run ads that are based on facts what can you trust him on,” says Voler.

“Is this dishonest? You know you could maybe make that case. But does it set a new precedent? No. This goes on all the time, it’s been going on for 30 years and this is where politics is in America today,” says Dill.

Source: FoxNews.com

Obama’s long goodbye

11:19 am in Editorials, Elections, immigration law, lbj, long goodbye, poll numbers, president george w bush, scott walker, socialist union, supreme court justices, union thugs by Gil Guignat

If you think Obama is going to be re-elected, you can forget it. His fate is sealed. He is on his way out! He has created so many disasters that the country is crumbling under their weight. Whether we are talking about his poll numbers, his initiatives, his immigration and social policies or basically anything he talks about or touches Obama  has become a jinx. He can’t get anything right. Anything and everything he approaches turns to failure. Americans have now woken up and they know things are getting worse not better in the United States precisely because Obama is viewed as the source of the country’s problems. According to Rasmussen’s latest polling Obama is down 7% 50-43 and the campaigning has not even started.
Let’s begin with the month of June and the new crop of disasters Obama has feverishly reaped.
1) Governor Scott Walker wins the Wisconsin the recall election and once and for all gets rid of the Marxist-socialist union thugs. Big loss for Obama.
2) The Supreme Court strikes down Obamacare. Huge loss for Obama.
3) The Supreme Court upholds upholds Arizona’s HB 1070 immigration law. Another loss.

The polls are heavily in favor of Governor Scott Walker and judging from the way the Supreme Court justices reacted to the arguments against Obamacare and in favor of Arizona’s immigration law, the odds are that Obama will be handed three stunning defeats in June. These will be massive, massive defeats from which the President cannot recover.

We were  curious to see what the approval polls of Presidents at this stage of the campaign with 6 months to go were like for those running for a 2nd term. Gallup published this data back in 2003 when considering what kind of chance President George W. Bush had for re-election. Here’s the data starting with  LBJ.

LBJ: May 75% approval. Won with 61% of the vote over Goldwater.
Nixon: May 62% approval. Won with 61% of the vote over McGovern.
Ford: May 47% approval. Lost with 48% of the vote to Carter [who got 50%].
Carter: May 40% approval. Lost with 41% of the vote to Reagan [who got 51%]
Reagan: May 53% approval. Won with 59% over Mondale.
Bush I: May 41% approval. Lost with 38% to Clinton [who got 43%. Note that Perot got 19%].
Clinton: May 54% approval. Won with 49% over Dole [who got 41%. Perot got 9%.]
Bush II: May 49% approval. Won with 53% over Kerry [who got 47%].

Obama has a very steep hill to climb for re-election. With the exception of George W. Bush in 2004, every incumbent President polling under 50% at this stage of the campaign lost, and usually big.

Most recent Gallup poll has Obama at 45% approval. ( Note this Gallup information was provided to us by one of our contributor-readers).

Let’s not forget that the above setbacks will come on the heals of President Obama’s declaration of support for gay marriage. Was he in support of gay marriage out of conviction or was he in support of gay marriage because he could make a cool $15 million in campaign cash by simply saying he thought gay marriage was a good idea.

We have to wonder if all of the sudden Al Qaeda pledged $1 billion to his campaign would Obama let Al Qaeda in the United States no questions asked. If the campaign contributions were high enough, would Obama make a case for polygamists? If they threw in $20 million, would Obama say he was for polygamy? How about polyandrists. Those are men who are married to one woman. If the polyandrists threw in $30 million, would Obama advocate for them?  Since this whole gay marriage thing is about marriage “equality” then why not be equal for everyone. Why limit marriage equality to just gays? Why not have true equality for all? What happens if a group of gay men want to be married to each other. Lets say a bunch pf them wanted to marry each other all at once. What then? Would we call that polygayists? For the right amount of cash, President Obama is very receptive to anything. If the president sells his soul for $15 million imagine what he would do to the country for a billion.

Somehow judging from N. Carolina’s recent refusal to recognize gay marriage it would seem the country is not ready for same sex marriage. Add to that that the head of the DNC in North Carolina ( a man) was indefinitely suspended for sexually harassing another man. Wouldn’t you think that if the Democrats are trying to sell us on same sex marriage that they could be on their best behavior at the very least? Thirty one other states have also said no. That is another disaster because N. Carolina will be the location of this year’s Democrat National Committee nomination of Obama for president.  Another jinxed Obama incompetence. They planned a convention in a state that no longer wants any part of Obama and it is likely he won’t carry that state either like he did last time. He has to win that state to win the presidency. In the end it will be the gay militancy in the media and the Democrat party that will have cost the president his re-election.

You would think that President Obama would have more pressing things to do like work on the economy which is getting progressively worse. A week or so ago the unemployment rate went down to 8.1% a sure sign of improvement. This of course is not true because in order for Obama’s unemployment numbers to improve 500,000 people had to be conveniently deleted. That means 500,000 people who desperately need work have been swept under the rug. Obama’s unemployment numbers are now dependent on having millions of newly unemployed mysteriously disappear from the statistics. You want to talk about a disaster. These people know they are now being ignored and the odds are they won’t vote for him anymore. If the millions of unemployed people who have been swept under the rug were included in the unemployment figures the true unemployment rate would be over 11%.

Since President Obama is unable to do anything for the economy, he only knows how to create distractions that wastes everyone’s time. One of his disasters a work in progress is the race hating and chaos industry. Those industries are known as the  Occupy movement which is promising to turn into a mob of anarchists. In a few weeks, Chicago will host the NATO Summit later in May and the Occupy movement is promising all out civil disobedience. Let’s not forget that the Occupy movement is a joint venture between the White House, the unions and the useful anarchists. This is all Obama. He has also ratcheted this a notch further by stoking the fires of racial hatred. The latest was getting in the middle of the Trayvon Martin incident which has turned into a multi million dollar industry featuring Trayvon’s parents who are jet setting all over the US and Europe to collect huge sums of money under the guise that  their son died. Why is anything that Obama is involved in always boil down to money, racial hatred, and pitting people against each other? No wonder more and more people want nothing to do with him.

President Obama is the one who is always harping how the rich have too much money, but at every turn we learn that he or his surrogates or his supporters are lining their pockets with as much money as they can get their hands on? The president himself has grown his fortune to $10 million in the three short years he has been in office.  Remember the billions that have disappeared into the solar energy black hole? Whether it is the gay thing, or the campaign thing, or the racial hatred thing, or whatever thing Obama is working on money his obsession and stoking hatred at every opportunity seems to be his goal. We could have sworn he wanted to show us that money and wealth  was all so evil. Maybe Obama is turning into the evil he is professing to fight and that is why he is losing support in droves. Obama’s  re-election campaign has morphed into a long goodbye which will end as Obama stands next to President-elect Mitt Romney and watches him sworn in as the new chief executive. Delicious!

Arizona immigration law: Supreme Court again examines federal power

5:20 am in arizona case, arizona gov, AZ News, Border/Immigration, controversial bill, health-care law, illegal immigrants, illegal immigration, immigration bill, immigration law, immigration status by PinkTeaPatriot

 

Supporters of immigration bill SB1070 shout during a rally at the Arizona Capitol prior to Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer signing the controversial bill into law Friday, April 23, 2010, in Phoenix. The sweeping measure would make it a crime under state law to be in the country illegally, and would require local law enforcement to question people about their immigration status if there is reason to suspect they are in the country illegally. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

Source:WashingtonPost.com

By: Robert Barnes

Posted: April 21st, 2012

The Supreme Court will conclude one of its most significant and controversial terms in decades by taking on one more issue that has divided the nation: Arizona’s crackdown on illegal immigrants.

The court’s final oral argument on Wednesday — Arizona v. United States — provides yet another chance for the justices to confront fundamental questions about the power of the federal government. And the rulings the court will issue between now and the end of June could dramatically alter the nation’s election-year landscape.

The court has considered President Obama’s health-care law, has taken its first look at the political redistricting battles being fought across the nation and will decide whether federal regulators still hold the authority to police the nation’s airwaves.

The Obama administration has moved aggressively against Arizona’s SB 1070, which directs law enforcement to play a much more active role in identifying illegal immigrants and makes it a crime for them to seek work. The administration has persuaded courts to put aside key parts of the law.

And, as with last month’s hearings on the health-care law, in the Arizona case the government is asking the court to recognize that the Constitution gives the federal government vast powers to confront national problems, such as illegal immigration.

“As the framers understood, it is the national government that has the ultimate responsibility to regulate the treatment of aliens while on American soil, because it is the nation as a whole — not any single state — that must respond to the international consequences of such treatment,” Solicitor General Donald B. Verrilli Jr. told the court in the government’s brief.

Immigration is one of the nation’s thorniest political issues. Obama and his administration have been accused of not properly securing the nation’s borders and criticized for not delivering comprehensive immigration reform. Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney’s tough stance against illegal immigration has angered some interest groups and is said to have cost him among increasingly influential Latino voters.

Read More: WashingtonPost.com

First Thoughts: Romney’s immigration challenge

1:20 pm in AZ News, beth myers, Elections, franklin institute in philadelphia, governor of massachusetts, immigration law, kansas secretary of state, market manipulation, meg whitman, msnbc, republican presidential candidate, tim shaffer by PinkTeaPatriot

Source: FirstRead.msnbc.msn.com

By: By NBC’s Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Domenico Montanaro, and Brooke Brower

Posted: April 17th, 2012

Romney’s immigration challenge… What Beth Myers heading up Romney’s VP search means…. Three very different polls in the Obama-Romney race… Romney to Obama: “Start packing”… Buffett Rule, as expected, goes down to defeat… Obama to make statement about market manipulation of oil prices at 11:10 am ET… Lugar mailer hits Mourdock… And GOP primary for Giffords’ seat in AZ takes place today.

Tim Shaffer / Reuters Republican presidential candidate and former Governor of Massachusetts Mitt Romney speaks during the Independence Hall Tea Party Association's Tax Day Tea Summit at the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania April 16, 2012.

*** Romney’s immigration challenge: Lost in the other statements Romney made at that Sunday fundraiser in Florida was his admission that he needs to move to the center to win over Latinos. “We have to get Hispanic voters to vote for our party,” Romney said, observing that polls show Latinos breaking in huge percentages for President Obama “spells doom for us.” Romney even said the GOP should offer something like a “Republican DREAM Act” to help woo Latinos. But there’s a challenge here for Romney, and it’s the same one Meg Whitman faced in 2010: How do you move back to center on immigration after running so hard to the right during the primary? Indeed, unlike other issues where he simply adopted conservative/Tea Party rhetoric (on health care, taxes, the deficit), Romney often used immigration as a weapon, particularly against Rick Perry. In addition, Romney said he would veto the DREAM Act, called Arizona’s immigration law “a model”, and proudly accepted the endorsement of the man considered the architect of that Arizona law, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach.

*** Is fixing his female problem easier than his Latino problem? Romney has the potential to fix his problem with female voters; after all, it’s not really his problem but rather the GOP’s. And he does have a story to tell here (wife Ann, the women he appointed in Massachusetts). But when it comes to immigration, this is an issue where he’s been consistent over the past five years as a way to prove his conservative bona fides (first against McCain, then against Perry and Gingrich).

Read More: FirstRead.msnbc.msn.com

Arizona Sing-A-Long: Read the Immigration Law!

11:08 pm in 1070, Arizona immigration bill, arizona immigration law, Department of Injustice Eric Holder, humor, immigration law, Janet Napolitano, read the bill, Videos by PinkTeaPatriot

Arizona Sing-A-Long: Read the Immigration Law!

 

Former Phoenix Police Chief Harris opposes immigration law

7:21 am in AZ News, Breaking News, chief harris, Clarence Dupnik, community cooperation, friend of the court, Headlines, immigration enforcement, immigration law, immigration status, jack harris, Local News, phoenix police, Pima County Sheriff by PinkTeaPatriot

Source: AZCentral.com

Posted: March 30th, 2012

PHOENIX — Former Phoenix Police Chief Jack Harris and two Arizona police officials have joined other colleagues from across the country in filing a friend-of-the-court brief with the U.S. Supreme Court expressing their opposition to the state’s immigration enforcement law.

The brief filed on behalf of Tucson Police Chief Roberto Villasenor, Pima County Sheriff Clarence Dupnik and Harris centers on the law’s requirement that officers — while enforcing other laws — question the immigration status of those they suspect of being in the country illegally.

The police bosses say the requirement would jeopardize community cooperation in investigating crimes.

Gov. Jan Brewer has appealed a federal judge’s decision to block enforcement of the immigration-check requirement and other controversial sections of the law.

The Supreme Court will hear arguments in Brewer’s appeal on April 25.