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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews Around the Republic of Mexico | May 2006 

Immigration Bill Gives Fox Political Boost
email this pageprint this pageemail usFrank Jack Daniel - Reuters


Pedro Aries, 80, wearing a mask of Mexican President Vicente Fox, carries a sign protesting Fox's visit, outside the Millennium Biltmore Hotel where Fox will be staying Friday, May 26, 2006. Fox is set to meet with community leaders, union officials and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. The sign reads: 'I'm a coward, a puppet of Bush, and a chatterbox.' (AP/Damian Dovarganes)
Mexico City - Mexican President Vicente Fox's ruling party could be the big winner of an immigration overhaul passed in the U.S. Senate as it tries to hold on to power in July elections.

The Senate easily passed a bill on Thursday that would give millions of illegal immigrants, many of them Mexicans, a chance to become American citizens.

The most sweeping immigration bill in two decades, it could be watered down in a tough battle with the House of Representatives, where many lawmakers favor a crackdown on immigration, and it may never become law.

However, it is unlikely to be reach a vote before the July 2 elections in Mexico, allowing Fox and his conservative ruling party's candidate Felipe Calderon to hail it in the meantime as vindication of Fox's relentless courting of Washington.

The president is on a tour of the United States to lobby on immigration issues and responded jubilantly to the news from the Senate, saying it was a victory won by his government and the determination of millions of Mexicans living in America.

"It is a truly joyous day, a historic day," he said after raising his fist in victory to Mexican reporters traveling on his presidential jet.

Opposition politicians, led by leftist presidential candidate Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, have criticized Fox for not being tougher with the United States on migration issues.

"I don't know what the president is celebrating," Lopez Obrador told reporters on a campaign trip in the northern town of Apodaca.

The leftist says emigration from Mexico has been fueled by Fox's free market economic policies and the lack of jobs.

"It surprises me that he is trying to use this affair as if it were a triumph of his government when he should be ashamed because four million Mexicans who have not had the opportunity to work during his government have left the country," he said.

HELPS CALDERON

Criticism of Fox intensified after President George W. Bush this month vowed to send up to 6,000 National Guard troops to the border, and the Senate approved building 370 miles of new high-security border fences.

Analysts say the new bill gives Fox something to show for his efforts and helps Calderon because there is little danger of it being knocked down this side of voting day.

"Even if it goes to conference and gets dusted away it ain't going to happen in the next week, its going to take a while and the elections will be done by then," said political analyst Federico Estevez.

With Fox barred under law from seeking reelection, Calderon and Lopez Obrador are locked in a tight race and campaigning has turned nasty in the last two months with both sides launching negative TV ads.

Mexicans are the largest immigrant group in America and would be the main beneficiaries if the Senate's reform bill makes it into law as it proposes a guest worker program and would put most of the 12 million illegal immigrants on a path to U.S. citizenship.

Immigration expert Arturo Solis, of the Tijuana-based Center for Border Studies and Human Rights, said the ruling National Action Party, PAN, would likely reap political advantage.

"The government knows how to sell the idea that the victory was theirs to the Mexicans," he said. "This could definitely benefit the PAN in the elections."

Millions of immigrants took part in massive marches in U.S cities in May to push for reforms and pressure against the criminalization of immigrants.

Some were delighted by the Senate bill.

"This is the only good news we have had in a long time," Guatemalan migrant Alexander Chung, 21, said from a Catholic church shelter in the Mexican border town of Reynosa as he prepared to cross illegally into Texas.

"We know they are going to send troops to the border and security is really serious, so this news gives us a lift."

(Additional reporting by Tim Gaynor)
Fox Praises Mexican Immigrants
Reuters

Sacramento, California - Mexican President Vicente Fox praised Mexican immigrants for pushing Washington on immigration reform on Friday, the last day of a U.S. trip during which he drew Republican barbs over the issue.

"We know about their contributions to this economy and to this country. We know about their loyalty to those who they work for," Fox said in a speech.

On Thursday, the U.S. Senate backed an immigration bill that would give millions of illegal immigrants a chance to become American citizens.

"They fought for it. They earned what they got yesterday," Fox told a California Chamber of Commerce audience.

The contentious issue still faces an uncertain outcome in the U.S. House of Representatives. which has passed a very different bill that calls for tough border security and enforcement measures.

The fractious debate in the U.S. Congress was reflected in miniature in the reaction to Fox's visit on Thursday to the California capital of Sacramento.

A few Republican lawmakers skipped his address to a joint session of legislature to protest Mexico's response to the flow of illegal immigrants into the United States.

"I'm going to refuse to listen to what he has to say today," said Republican Assemblywoman Sharon Runner. "His country is not helping."

Some Republicans attended but wore lapel pins reading "No Mas!" -- a message to Fox to do more to control their emigration.

"Mexico cannot continue to ignore the crisis of illegal immigration into the United States," Republican State Senator Dave Cox said. "I do not believe it fosters a productive discussion when President Fox has stereotyped efforts to control our borders as 'discriminatory,' and called those who oppose illegal immigration 'xenophobic."'

Democratic lawmaker Mark Leno mocked the Republican protests. "You'd think that Fidel Castro was visiting," he said of the Communist Cuban leader. "It's so insulting."



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