TweetHe can Kiss my Ass!
Just kidding, of course hes only thinking of your family and not cheaper wages for the BOTTOM 95% of us!
Glad hes for the troops. I just wonder when he's going to start paying the men DOING the fighting and dying in Pesos?
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - In what could be the biggest change in U.S. immigration law in nearly two decades, the Bush administration is drawing up plans to help more immigrants find work legally in the United States, officials and congressional aides said on Wednesday.
President Bush (news - web sites) is expected to outline the new program next month, most likely before traveling to Monterrey, Mexico, on Jan. 12 for talks with Mexican President Vicente Fox (news - web sites) and other Latin American leaders at a summit of the Organization of American States.
"The president has said that we need to have an immigration policy that helps match any willing employer with any willing employee," a White House official said. "The administration is studying the issue and will make recommendations to Congress in due course."
Administration officials declined to offer many details about the program under consideration.
It is expected to include elements from immigration reform legislation proposed by U.S. Sen. John McCain (news, bio, voting record) and Reps. **** Flake and Jim Kolbe, all Arizona Republicans.
That bill would create a new type of temporary work visa and an electronic job registry that would allow U.S. employers to post jobs for Americans as well as foreign workers.
Under the legislation, new visa holders would have the same rights, wages, working conditions and protections as American workers. Visa holders could apply for lawful permanent resident status after three years in the United States.