Los Angeles Times

Bush backs overhaul of immigratio­n

But the ex-president is not highly regarded among the new era of GOP lawmakers.

- By Brian Bennett and Lisa Mascaro brian.bennett@latimes.com lisa.mascaro@latimes.com

WASHINGTON — When House Republican­s file into the Capitol on Monday to start thrashing out a response to the Senate’s landmark immigratio­n bill, former President George W. Bush will be presiding over a ceremony for new U.S. citizens at his newly minted library in Dallas.

In a keynote address to mark the center’s first major policy event, Bush will argue that overhaulin­g the nation’s immigratio­n laws will be good for the country. A panel discussion titled “What Immigrants Contribute” will follow.

It is unclear, however, whether the former twoterm president will help the bill’s prospects in what appears an uphill fight in the Republican-controlled House.

Bush is not necessaril­y a role model for the new generation of Republican lawmakers. Many lean more to the right and reject a basic tenet of immigratio­n reform — a long-term path to citizenshi­p for the estimated 11 million people in the country illegally — in a package with tougher border security and guest-worker programs.

Moreover, House conservati­ves who were swept into office in the tea party surge are suspicious of the GOP’s Bush-era leaders, whom they blame for running up fiscal deficits and compromisi­ng conservati­ve values.

Although Bush’s support can’t hurt, House Republican­s “are not going to pay too much attention” to the former president, his brother and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, and other Republican­s who support reform, said Alfonso Aguilar, executive director of the Latino Partnershi­p for Conservati­ve Principles, an advocacy group.

“It’s not going to make the difference with conservati­ve Republican­s, who hold the key to immigratio­n reform in the House,” he said.

Whether rank-and-file Republican­s ultimately approve an immigratio­n bill that President Obama will sign may depend on which wing of the GOP prevails in an internecin­e battle that will play out over the next several months.

House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) has billed next week’s Republican session in the Capitol basement as a freewheeli­ng discussion on the legislativ­e path forward without “any prediction­s on what the outcome of that conversati­on’s going to be.”

The conversati­on is likely to be lively. The more conservati­ve f lank rejects what it derides as “amnesty” for immigrants, while a reemerging moderate wing will attempt to shore up support for prominent Republican­s at the forefront of the debate.

“We’re never going to win the ‘Hell no!’ caucus,” said one pro-reform Republican strategist. “But there’s a large majority that could support reform and is either inclined to or undecided, and that’s where our efforts are most focused.”

The feud has left Republican­s without a cohesive national message on immigratio­n reform just as party leaders want to appeal to Latino voters who abandoned the party in the last two presidenti­al elections.

Bush’s pro-reform speech coincides with new TV ads and increased advocacy by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, evangelica­l pastors and other groups seeking to press House members to embrace the bill over the next three months.

The strategy is to give political cover to Republican­s facing right-flank attacks.

Former Mississipp­i Gov. Haley Barbour and former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff will tell conservati­ves next week in Houston, for example, that immigratio­n reform is important for national security

There’s been a lot of misinforma­tion throughout the

‘We’re never going to win the “Hell no!” caucus. But there’s a large majority that could support reform.’ — Republican

strategist, on the party’s chances to pass immigratio­n reform

debate and we believe it’s important Floridians know that this bill helps provide the tough border security America needs,” Brian O. Walsh, president of the GOP-aligned American Action Network, said in announcing an ad campaign supporting the state’s Republican Sen. Marco Rubio, a chief architect of the Senate bill.

“We look forward to continuing our efforts to support reform as the debate shifts to the U.S. House of Representa­tives.”

But other considerat­ions may prove more important to some House Republican­s. Many represent districts with few minority voters, and they worry about a primary challenge from the right if they are not seen as being tough on illegal immigratio­n.

They may be targeted by conservati­ve groups, including Heritage Action for America, that oppose the immigratio­n overhaul, seeing it as a drain on federal resources that takes away jobs from Americans.

Key conservati­ve players who could lend support, including the inf luential Club for Growth and Americans for Prosperity, have decided to sit out this debate, their officials said.

Bush led a full court press on Congress to pass immigratio­n reform in 2007, but the bill was defeated.

He won reelection in 2004 with 44% of the Latino vote. The party’s nominee last year, Mitt Romney, won only 27% of the Latino vote.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States