When Hillary Clinton staked out her position on immigration this week, supporters hailed her for bear-hugging every advocacy group’s wish list on policy points — provide a pathway to full citizenship, check; expand executive actions, check; reform “inhumane” detention practices, check, check and check.
In an era when pledges to “fix our broken immigration system” have been repeated so often by both parties that the phrase has lost its meaning, advocates say it’s now no longer enough for a Democratic candidate to say they support an immigration overhaul — they demand more.
Clinton did not disappoint. Her remarks were the most forceful stance on immigration seen from any presidential candidate — announced or not — defying expectations and and even coming to the left of President Obama, who in recent years has taken unprecedented steps to protect more than 5 million undocumented immigrants who have established firm roots in the U.S.
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Clinton is certainly needling Republican contenders who have been imperiled by the immigration debate, allowing the chasm to grow within the GOP presidential field between candidates who have taken a hard shift to the right and others attempting to make inroads with Latino voters. While many Republican candidates have been murky on the details over how they would deal with the 11 million unauthorized immigrants living in the U.S., Clinton was unequivocal: “We can’t wait for a path to equal citizenship,” Clinton said Tuesday. She also took a shot at more moderate Republicans, like former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who has been open to providing a pathway to a legal status, but not citizenship. “When they talk about legal status, that is code for second-class status,” she said.
Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker became the first respond to Clinton’s remarks, blasting her “full embrace of amnesty” as “unfair.” Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee followed suit, also slamming Clinton for seeking to “reward illegal immigrants with the right-to-vote.”
“Hillary has started her presidential campaign with an open plea to win Obama’s third term,” Huckabee said in a statement.
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