CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

68F Hi 82F
Lo 70F

Recent Blog Posts

Giuliani's New Hard-Line Stance On Immigration Draws Skeptics

By JILL GARDINER, Staff Reporter of the Sun
August 15, 2007

Mayor Giuliani's attempt to recast himself as a strong opponent of illegal immigration is being met with skepticism from those on both sides of the immigration debate.

Share Share Email

Click to enlarge image >

Brett Flashnick / AP

Republican presidential hopeful Rudy Giuliani speaks on his plans to change immigration policy during a town hall meeting in Columbia, S.C., yesterday.

Mr. Giuliani gave a speech in the early primary state of South Carolina yesterday that seemed to respond to criticism from his one of his Republican rivals, Mitt Romney, who has generated headlines in the last week for painting Mr. Giuliani as lax on illegal immigration. But the former mayor, who had a reputation for his pro-immigrant policies in New York, does not seem to be winning over advocates for stronger immigration regulations or for those who think more visas are needed.

"It sounds like an effort by Giuliani to make himself seem like a hawk on immigration when, in fact, he's been a dove all along," the executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, Mark Krikorian, said.

Mr. Krikorian favors a stronger crackdown on illegal immigrants. Mr. Giuliani told an audience of more than 300 people at a community center yesterday that he would secure the country's borders and "end illegal immigration."

"We can end illegal immigration. I promise you we can end illegal immigration," Mr. Giuliani said, according to the Associated Press. The Republican presidential front-runner said those who are in the country illegally should be able to apply for citizenship if they identify themselves and then learn English.

He is also pushing the creation of a "national database of foreigners" and a "tamper-proof" biometric identification card for any non-American who is working or going to school in this country. He is also vowing to deploy 20,000 border patrol agents to deport illegal immigrants who commit a felony and to build a fence along the American border.

His focus on immigration comes less than a week after Mr. Romney criticized him for running a "sanctuary city" in New York when he was mayor. Mr. Giuliani defended his record, saying that when he was in office, New York had the lowest number of per capita illegal immigrants of any major city.

During a radio interview yesterday, the mayor said the country should focus its deportation efforts on those who commit crimes first. When talking about border patrol he said it was complicated but that it wasn't "brain surgery." Mr. Giuliani is no doubt caught in a difficult political position on an issue that has divided Republicans. Senator McCain, one of his other leading rivals, has taken more heat from conservatives on immigration than any other candidate in the field.

Mr. Giuliani must figure out how to square his reputation as a pro-immigrant mayor while appealing to conservative primary voters. Political analysts say he also needs to be wary of flip-flopping — something for which he and others have criticized Mr. Romney. A senior scholar at the Manhattan Institute, Tamar Jacoby, said Mr. Giuliani's proposal is a "fairly responsible" first step but that it is too focused on enforcement.

"Trying to end illegal immigration with enforcement alone is like trying to maintain a zero-calorie diet," she said. "It doesn't work." She said the country needs more visas for both unskilled and skilled workers.

Earlier this week, Mr. Giuliani appointed seven immigration advisers and sent out a memo detailing some of the harder-line comments he made on illegal immigration in the early 1980s.

The director of the Manhattan-based Center for an Urban Future, Jonathan Bowles, said Mr. Giuliani seems to have forgotten the "positive impact that immigrants, both legal and illegal, have had on New York and other cities."

He pointed out that Mr. Giuliani created the mayor's office of immigrant affairs when he was in City Hall and filed suit against the federal government for attempting to allow city employees to turn in illegal immigrants who came forward for city services.

A spokeswoman for Mr. Giuliani, Maria Comella, said the mayor has always been in favor of legal immigration but has also argued that the federal government has failed to secure the borders. "It's a question of tackling this issue of the border security so that ultimately legal immigration can continue to grow," she said.


Reader comments on this article

TitleByDate

Don't Buy It..... [41 words]

Jay 

Aug 17, 2007 22:43

What is wrong with preferring as immigrants one's own kinsmen? [48 words]

Obamanation 

Aug 16, 2007 17:12

  At what point does Giuliani style Cultural and Racial Diversity become a kind of Social Anarchy? [41 words]

Voltaire 

Aug 16, 2007 18:54

Rudy! [30 words]

william tate 

Aug 16, 2007 14:46

Politicans only say what you want to hear for thier own advancement !! [190 words]

THOMAS GAFRANCESCO 

Aug 16, 2007 10:17

Believed Bush was a Conservative [190 words]

Taxpayer 

Aug 16, 2007 08:44

What will it take [76 words]

Pissed American 

Aug 16, 2007 08:23

Rudy = MexiCain on this issue [57 words]

gvmeacalll 

Aug 16, 2007 02:43

Giuliani Deal Breaker... [122 words]

Judy 

Aug 15, 2007 23:36

Illegal Immigration [56 words]

American Patriot 

Aug 15, 2007 22:33

campaign too long [212 words]

Eloy Burciaga 

Aug 15, 2007 14:25

A big con [65 words]

Bettybb 

Aug 15, 2007 12:35

When will people ever learn? [144 words]

Juan Marquez 

Aug 15, 2007 11:31

  Fences work just fine [118 words]

Richard Lippi 

Aug 15, 2007 19:51

Speak English [109 words]

Amity 

Aug 15, 2007 08:47

Illegal Immigration [213 words]

jpturneriii 

Aug 15, 2007 07:24

  Rudy's Campain promises [40 words]

Bud Spaulding 

Aug 15, 2007 19:40

Dog Days of Summer
A New York Sun Advertorial Section

NEW YORK >

Study Sought Of Test Score Gains in N.Y.

Rochester Billionaire Targets Silver With New PAC

Crane Inspector Pleads Not Guilty

New York Moves To Defend Gun Law

Hedge Fund Scammer Tells NY Judge He Tried Suicide

Murder, Rape Numbers Mar Positive Crime Statistics

NATIONAL >

'Paradise Is Burning': Fires Prompt California Evacuations

FARC Hostages Return to America

White House Says Ruling Could Free Detainees in America

McCain Extols Free Trade in Colombia

Race Profiling Considered In FBI Terrorist Probes

Bush Vows More Troops in Afghanistan

ARTS+ >

Painting for Eternity: Pietre Dure at the Met

America's Birth Papers at the NYPL

Phillip Pearlstein, Objectifying the Nude

'Tis the Season for Big Bands

'Red Cliff' Investors Cover Costs

Movies in Brief: 'Diminished Capacity'