Talk About Platner’s Other Perversions and Creepiness; Leave His VA Stuff Out of...
Look Who's Surging in Alabama's Senate Race
The Free Press: 'Graham Platner's Ex-Girlfriend Wants to Set the Record Straight'
Skid Row: Uh, We Got Paid By Dems to Vote for Their People
Here's the Man Roy Cooper Refused to Lock Up
CBS News' Editor-in-Chief's Next Assignment Will Certainly Cause Libs to Melt Down
ICE Raids Are Coming to This Major City Soon
When Leadership Loses Its Moral Compass
Our Informational World Is Getting Smaller
Kristen Welker Insults President Trump With 'No Evidence' Guff
An Obama-Era Border Crosser
Man Who Murdered Ukrainian Woman on Charlotte Light Rail Ruled Incompetent to Stand...
More Money Won’t Fix Our Schools. Mississippi Data Proves It.
College Grads Hurt by H-1B Visas
Fight Night at 1600: The Outrage Industry Meets the Octagon
OPINION

McCain Speaks to La Raza

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
McCain Speaks to La Raza

GOP presidential candidate John McCain indicated he’d like to give immigration reform another try at the National Council of La Raza’s annual meeting in San Diego.

Advertisement

“I don’t want to fail again to achieve comprehensive immigration reform,” McCain told those attending NCLR’s annual meeting Monday.

There, McCain stressed his newly-held priority of border enforcement before discussions about granting legal status to illegal immigrants. “We must prove we have the resources to secure our borders and use them while respecting the dignity and rights of citizens and legal residents of the United States. When we have achieved our border security goal, we must enact and implement the other parts of a fair, practical and necessary immigration policy.”

McCain’s Democratic rival, Barack Obama, spoke at the conference Sunday. He used the occasion to highlight McCain’s push for border security, a move he made through the Republican primaries with strong encouragement from his GOP base. Obama said, “McCain used to buck his party on immigration by fighting for comprehensive reform – and I admired him for it. But when he was running for his party’s nomination, he abandoned his courageous stance… we need to offer those who are willing to make amends a pathway to citizenship."

McCain said he would not attack Obama in his NCLR speech, but said “I feel I must, as they say, correct the record.” He reminded listeners, “At a moment of great difficulty in my campaign, when my critics said it would be political suicide for me to do so, I helped author with Senator Kennedy comprehensive immigration reform, and fought for its passage.”

Advertisement

In previous visits with Hispanic immigration groups, like the League of United Latin American Citizens and the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials, McCain did not speak this frankly about his work to advance McCain-Kennedy, instead sticking mainly to themes about economics and trade.

McCain seemed especially warm towards NCLR at points of his speech, praising them on their work to provide mortgages to Hispanics and build charters schools in Latino communities.

He also thanked NCLR’s former CEO Raul Yzaguiree, who was Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s lead immigration adviser, for “over twenty years of friendship and counsel he has so generously given me.”

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement