Politico reported this morning that the bipartisan “Gang of Eight,” now that its members have unveiled their proposal for comprehensive immigration reform, is “mounting an aggressive lobbying campaign with one major goal: weaken the conservative opposition to a sweeping immigration overhaul.”
That’s no easy task. Whenever a major piece of legislation is poised to make progress, the far-right comes up with a series of bizarre talking points, raising concerns with no basis in reality, which often take root before proponents know what to do about it. Indeed, fears of an imaginary “gun registry” helped kill efforts to prevent gun violence just yesterday, and immigration reform advocates are eager to prevent something similar from happening again.
And that means responded to nonsense such as “MarcoPhones.”
You may recall the right’s ugly preoccupation with the “ObamaPhone” conspiracy theory, which has apparently metastasized — opponents of the bipartisan immigration bill believe Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and his allies intend to give taxpayer-financed cell phones to documented immigrants with work visas. It’s not true.
According to some politicos involved with helping craft this bill, the phones in question are for ranchers and locals that can prove they reside along the border. […]









