NOVANEWS
Several months ago, the GOP made a legislative three-ring circus out of the immigration issue. Branding President Barack Obama an addict to extreme leftism, Republicans staged an intervention-performance to prevent him from compulsive granting of amnesty to undocumented immigrants.
The Hinder the Administration’s Legalization Temptation Act—HALT—absurd in both the full and acronym, never went anywhere beyond a comedic set of hearings. There’s a good reason for that; it was clear to everyone involved that nothing like amnesty was planned by Obama, and that even his claim to move more humanitarian cases to the end of the docket had no firm parameters. The HALT act was merely a stage on which to enact anti-Obama theater.
Obama, for his part, told his Latino supporters that immigration reform was impossible, because he lacked a “dance partner” on the Republican side. What the antagonistic spectacle obscured was the reality that the mainstream Republican and Democrat immigration policies have been seamless on the federal level. Unbelievably, Republican presidential hopeful Mitt Romney criticized Obama for un-kept promises in reducing immigration, saying “the truth is, he didn’t even try.” This was a week or so before it was announced that Obama had surpassed the Bush deportation rate by a factor of four [I wrote about some of this on my own blog here].
Democrats and Republicans “hand in glove”
A similar choreography, with familiar personalities, disguises the hand-in-glove approach of Democrats and Republicans to the issue of Palestine and Israel. In this case, the Palestinian Authority’s UN bid for recognition of statehood has provided a useful stage for a partisan battle. Despite the fact that the Obama administration has, at every turn, expressed viral opposition to the statehood bid at the UN, Republican luminaries have still gotten a lot of mileage out of the claim that Obama policies have encouraged the Palestinian Authority’s quest. Texas governor Rick Perry, another Republican presidential hopeful, and pundit-minions such as former US Ambassador to the UN John Bolton and former presidential candidate Mike Huckabee all blamed the PA statehood bid on Obama. Mitt Romney’s criticism, posted on his website, offers a condensed summary of the Republican line. Obama had:
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“[distanced] the US from Israel”
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“thrown” Israel “under the bus” by locking it into the 1967 final state parameters.
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And, in a comical turn, Romney claimed that Obama’s mention of the words “state” andUN to Palestinians at some point previously had planted some a kind of irresistible suggestion in the mind of Mahmoud Abbas that had led inexorably to the statehood bid.
Romney insisted that
The United States also should communicate that we are prepared to cut foreign assistance to the Palestinians so long as they continue to pursue statehood apart from the negotiating table.
Less than a week later, the Republican controlled Foreign Appropriations Sub-Committee did just that. Under the heading of recommendations for the West Bank and Gaza, the report recommends withholding funding…
[…] until the Secretary of State certifies that the Palestinian Authority is not attempting to seek recognition at the United Nations of a Palestinian state […]