Las Vegas Review-Journal
February 3, 2008
The U.S. Senate finally appears to understand that American
citizens do not want illegal immigrants rewarded for breaking
the law, and Nevada Sen. John Ensign is a big reason why.
The economic stimulus bill approved by the Senate Finance
Committee last week included a measure that requires tax rebate
recipients and dependent children to have valid Social Security
numbers. That measure was introduced by Sen. Ensign after
he pointed out that the rebate legislation, if not amended,
would allow illegal immigrants working under fraudulent taxpayer
identification numbers to receive checks.
"I am not sure the American taxpayer would like people
who are here illegally in this country to be getting a tax
rebate," Sen. Ensign successfully argued.
The bill sailed through the committee on a bipartisan vote.
What a difference 20 months and a grass-roots uprising can
make.
In May 2006, when the Senate was hurriedly shoving "comprehensive"
immigration reform down the throats of an unsupportive electorate,
Sen. Ensign introduced an amendment to ensure that illegals,
once granted amnesty, could not receive Social Security benefits
based on their years of work under stolen or bogus taxpayer
identification numbers. That amendment was hotly debated before
being withdrawn from consideration on a 50-49 vote.
The lawmakers who slapped down Sen. Ensign in 2006 as some
kind of xenophobe thought it was perfectly reasonable to not
only forgive illegals for cutting ahead of millions of other
foreigners who want to work in the United States, but to put
them on a path to retirement. The resulting public outrage
was unlike anything Washington had experienced in years.
Thankfully, the "comprehensive" approach is dead.
Its biggest supporter back then was Arizona Sen. John McCain.
Would he be the front-runner for the Republican presidential
nomination if hadn't repudiated his hill to die for? Certainly
not.
So amid a campaign season in which candidates are sniping
about who held what position when, Sen. Ensign can boast that
he has consistently represented the will of the electorate
in the illegal immigration debate.
Citizens want current immigration laws enforced. Citizens
want America's southern border secured. Citizens do not want
illegal immigrants to receive taxpayer-funded benefits, as
evidenced by statewide votes in California and Arizona.
And if Congress is going to put the federal government further
into debt by handing out "rebate" checks during
an economic downturn, citizens don't want illegal immigrants
getting back money they probably never paid in the first place.
After hanging tough in what looked like a losing battle, Sen.
Ensign now has Congress falling in line behind him. He deserves
voters' thanks.