- Joined
- Jan 21, 2009
- Location
- somewhere else
The following is from my State Representative Elton Gallegly and yes he is a conservative and even a republican but in my eyes he is just right on.
June 29, 2010
Reserve jobs for legal workers, Mr. President
If anyone doubts the Obama Administration has decided to protect illegal immigrants at the expense of American workers, U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis' recent actions and comments should remove all doubts. Secretary Solis has created a hot line where illegal workers can call to report they are being underpaid by employers.
Now, certainly abusive employers should be prosecuted -- as should any employer who knowingly hires illegal immigrants. But when unemployment is stubbornly at double digits, the Department of Labor should be looking for ways to increase jobs for those legally in the United States, not spending taxpayer dollars to protect those who take jobs away from Americans.
"Remember, every worker in America has the right to be paid fairly, whether documented or not," Secretary Solis said in announcing the program. "So call us."
Secretary Solis neglects to mention illegal immigrants do not have a right to work here in the first place.
It's the same mentality that led Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to announce the U.S. Justice Department plans to sue Arizona over its immigration law, which it was forced to pass because the federal government refuses to enforce federal immigration laws. Arizona is not alone.
Five states are looking at Arizona-style legislation and lawmakers in 17 other states have expressed support for similar measures, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
President Obama and congressional leadership should be insisting that immigration laws be enforced and jobs for Americans be protected. Then there would be no need for states to act in their stead.
This week a House and Senate conference committee is expected to finish reconciling differences between both chambers' financial services bills. The bill would continue to expose taxpayers by codifying the "too big to fail" status for select Wall Street firms and offering public monies as the initial source of funding to bail out troubled firms.
I believe any financial reform bill must:
• Stop the taxpayer-funded permanent bailouts for Wall Street.
• Reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the root causes of the housing meltdown and financial crisis that cost taxpayers $145 billion and counting.
• Empower businesses small and large to create jobs and spur economic growth.
• Demand accountability from failed federal regulators and bureaucrats.
June 29, 2010
Reserve jobs for legal workers, Mr. President
If anyone doubts the Obama Administration has decided to protect illegal immigrants at the expense of American workers, U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis' recent actions and comments should remove all doubts. Secretary Solis has created a hot line where illegal workers can call to report they are being underpaid by employers.
Now, certainly abusive employers should be prosecuted -- as should any employer who knowingly hires illegal immigrants. But when unemployment is stubbornly at double digits, the Department of Labor should be looking for ways to increase jobs for those legally in the United States, not spending taxpayer dollars to protect those who take jobs away from Americans.
"Remember, every worker in America has the right to be paid fairly, whether documented or not," Secretary Solis said in announcing the program. "So call us."
Secretary Solis neglects to mention illegal immigrants do not have a right to work here in the first place.
It's the same mentality that led Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to announce the U.S. Justice Department plans to sue Arizona over its immigration law, which it was forced to pass because the federal government refuses to enforce federal immigration laws. Arizona is not alone.
Five states are looking at Arizona-style legislation and lawmakers in 17 other states have expressed support for similar measures, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.
President Obama and congressional leadership should be insisting that immigration laws be enforced and jobs for Americans be protected. Then there would be no need for states to act in their stead.
This week a House and Senate conference committee is expected to finish reconciling differences between both chambers' financial services bills. The bill would continue to expose taxpayers by codifying the "too big to fail" status for select Wall Street firms and offering public monies as the initial source of funding to bail out troubled firms.
I believe any financial reform bill must:
• Stop the taxpayer-funded permanent bailouts for Wall Street.
• Reform Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the root causes of the housing meltdown and financial crisis that cost taxpayers $145 billion and counting.
• Empower businesses small and large to create jobs and spur economic growth.
• Demand accountability from failed federal regulators and bureaucrats.




