the jackassery deepens

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Border security hot issue in Texas governor race By Brandi Grissom / Austin Bureau

AUSTIN — Kinky Friedman has said that if he was elected governor of
Texas, he would make the Mexican government pay for the costs of
illegal immigration in Texas or face what he called the “Israeli
discount.”

“We should be as ruthless as they are with the southern border,” said
the independent gubernatorial candidate, author and musician.

The heated national debate over border security and immigration is
also a major issue among Texas candidates for the state’s top job as
they rev up their campaigns in the 60 days remaining before the Nov.
7 election.

During the past several months, GOP Gov. Rick Perry has implemented
several border security initiatives and extolled their success side
by side with border county sheriffs and state security officials. But
each of his three main opponents — Friedman, Democrat Chris Bell and
independent Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn — said Perry’s
measures were too little too late and were all done in the name of
political expediency.

“The situation is not getting better, and it shouldn’t, because it’s
been neglected for political reasons,” Friedman said.

He said he supports groups such as the Minutemen Civil Defense Corps
because they draw attention to problems on the border.

Asked about his own strategy for securing the border, Friedman said,
“I’m not sure. I don’t have a plan.”

He said he would appoint people who care about the state to develop a
plan based on his motto: “Remember the Alamo.”

Border safety has deteriorated, Friedman said, because politicians
are too afraid to offend Hispanics and get tough on the Mexican
government.

“I would tell them (Mexican government officials) to step up to the
plate and pay their fair share of the cost illegals are costing the
state of Texas,” he said. “If they don’t do that, then I want the
border on the nightly news every night.”

Friedman said he agrees with Perry that the border must be secured
before changes in immigration law are considered.

Congress is now at loggerheads over how much to increase border
security and whether those plans should also include measures that
allow more documented immigrant workers in the country.

“If we can’t draw a line, call it a border and protect it, then we
might as well not be here at all,” Friedman said.

Democratic gubernatorial candidate Chris Bell, a former congressman
from Houston, said he agrees that border security must improve.
Unlike the other candidates, though, he said security could only
happen if immigration laws were also tackled.

He said the call for more fencing in some border areas makes sense,
as does the placing of National Guard soldiers on the border as a
stopgap measure while more U.S. Border Patrol agents are trained.

He said, however, that a plan Perry announced this summer to spend $5
million to put video cameras on private land along the border and
stream the video over the Internet encourages vigilantism.

“I don’t think we need to be turning private citizens into immigrant
hunters,” Bell said.

He added that plans such as Perry’s Operation Rio Grande, for which
the governor allotted about $10 million in the past year to state and
local law enforcement, are not reducing illegal border traffic.

“The flow of immigrants across the border has continued in large
numbers,” he said. “I don’t think it makes a lot of sense to turn
local officials into border patrol agents.”

If elected, Bell said, he would lobby Congress to pass comprehensive
legislation on border security and immigration.

“If we had been enforcing laws against hiring undocumented workers,
then we probably wouldn’t be having this national discussion,” he said

He said he would also work with federal legislators to create a plan
that would use billions in payroll taxes from unidentified
undocumented immigrants to repay border states for social service
costs incurred by undocumented immigrants.

Independent candidate Strayhorn, who won her current office running
as a Republican, said that she is “adamantly against” illegal
immigration and that she would put all necessary resources into
securing the Texas-Mexico border.

“We have got to secure our border, our ports and our infrastructure,”
she said.

She emphasized that she would work closely with local law enforcement
officials to determine what resources are needed to increase border
security, she and called the $10 million Perry has given border
sheriffs “paltry.”

Asked about her plan for securing the border, Strayhorn said: “I’m
rolling out all of my Texas first agenda, but let me tell you:
Whatever it takes.”

Strayhorn said one of the first things she would do if elected is
eliminate a Texas law that allows undocumented immigrant students to
pay in-state tuition at public universities if they attended public
schools for three years and can prove they are working to become
citizens. “We cannot be giving in-state tuition to illegal
immigrants,” she said.

Last year, Strayhorn told a Houston Republican group that Texas had a
responsibility to provide education and health care for immigrants,
legal or otherwise.

“I sympathize with those coming over who want to put a roof over
their heads,” she said, according to an August 2005 Associated Press
report.

Responding to questions about whether that statement was consistent
with her current plan to eliminate the in-state tuition law,
Strayhorn repeated: “I am adamantly against illegal immigration.”

Perry spokesman Robert Black called the border security ideas
Strayhorn and Bell promoted non-plans.

Responding to Friedman’s suggestion that Texas should treat its
border as Israel does, Black said: “Wow. That kind of rhetoric is
irresponsible. It’s not real. It’s cartoon rhetoric.”

He said Perry, who became governor in 2000, has been working for more
than a year and a half to increase border security. The efforts, he
said, were not political but based on reports from Steve McCraw, whom
Perry appointed Texas homeland security director, which indicated the
border was a serious security threat.

Black said operations along the border in Del Rio, Laredo and El Paso
– where local officials report crime reduced between 45 and 70
percent — are effective and a model Washington should follow.

Web cameras on the border, he said, will act as an expanded
neighborhood watch program.

“There is no reason why Texans should not be allowed to help secure
the border,” he said.

Perry continues to press congressional leaders and the Bush
administration to pony up for border security efforts, Black said.
Until that happens, he said, Perry would push state legislators to
approve an additional $100 million for city police, county sheriffs
and state law enforcement to increase security operations.

He said Perry believes that programs providing for more documented
migrant workers in the U.S. will only work after Congress has
improved border security.

“The safety of Texans is paramount,” he said.

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