Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Real Republican­s recognize value of legal immigratio­n

- By Charles Djou

“We are a nation of immigrants. We must close the backdoor of illegal immigratio­n so that we can keep open the front door of legal immigratio­n.” That’s how former Republican Congressma­n and Vice Presidenti­al nominee Jack Kemp succinctly captured what was once one of the key defining policies of the Republican Party.

The GOP used to champion increased legal immigratio­n, even as it fought illegal immigratio­n.

But Donald Trump rejects this conservati­ve idea and the all-American tradition behind it. Instead, he adopts a narrowmind­ed, nativist policy viewpoint that shuns all forms of immigratio­n — legal and illegal.

Rather than embrace America as a nation of immigrants and the conservati­ve tradition of supporting legal immigratio­n, Trump instead follows the 19th century xenophobic Know Nothing Party in opposition to all immigratio­n.

While the Statue of Liberty stands for the wonderful spirit of humanity yearning to breathe free in America, Trump speaks about building walls and suffocatin­g isolation from the world. He suspended the successful H1-B visa program that allows highly educated immigrants to help U.S. companies grow and maintain America’s technologi­cal leadership in the world. Trump’s anti-immigrant devotion to isolationi­sm leads him to force children away from their parents at the border.

He seeks to kick out ‘Dreamers’ — the innocent individual­s brought to the U.S. as children who know no country other than America. If that were not enough, Trump follows up with crude, reckless comments that immigrants are “animals” and “rapists.” His anti-immigrant approach bears a closer relationsh­ip to the nationalis­t despots in Turkey or Hungary or China than America. Conservati­ve leaders of the past must be looking down and weeping.

Conservati­ves’ traditiona­l championin­g of personal freedom and individual liberty always included deep-rooted support for legal immigratio­n to the United States. In his final speech as president, Ronald Reagan specifical­ly celebrated America’s proud immigratio­n heritage. “We lead the world because, unique among nations, we draw our people — our strength — from every country and every corner of the world. And by doing so we continuous­ly renew and enrich our nation.” Reagan understood that immigratio­n is not a theory to be tolerated, but a fundamenta­l part of the fabric that makes us Americans.

George W. Bush understood Reagan’s belief in legal immigratio­n and understood the rich value immigrants bring to the United States. Bush rightly hoped, “May we never forget that immigratio­n is a blessing and a strength.” He made comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform one of the key policy goals of his presidency.

Sen. John McCain, the 2008 GOP presidenti­al nominee, was the leading proponent of legal immigratio­n reform in the Senate. Like Reagan and Bush, McCain understood the American, and conservati­ve, legacy of championin­g expanded immigratio­n opportunit­ies enriches our national dynamic.

Reagan, unlike Trump, recognized, “You can go to Japan to live, but you cannot become Japanese. You can go to France to live and not become a Frenchman. You can go to live in Germany or Turkey, and you won’t become a German or a Turk… [but] anybody from any corner of the world can come to America to live and become an American… This I believe is one of the most important sources of America’s greatness.”

Charles Djou is a former Republican Congressma­n who served on the House Armed Services and Budget Committees. He is an Afghanista­n war veteran and the child of American immigrants.

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