KEEPING THE FAITH ACTION ALERT
March 24, 2006

THE WEEK IN REVIEW

 

Actually, it is a week and a half in review!  Last week when I sent out a KTF, I neglected to tell you that our Bible bill passed!  So sorry – chalk it up to sleep deprivation.

 

Senator Tommie Williams, who carried the bill, did a wonderful job of defending the legislation to those who did not want the Bible to be used as the text book.  Essentially what the bill does is offer an elective course on the Bible on school campus.  This is historic as students previously had to leave school campus in order to take a course on the Good Book.  Senator Williams first introduced this legislation in 1999(along with Rep. Tommie Smith in the House).  It is a good day for the students in ’s schools!

 

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S. B. 529, Senator Chip Rogers’ legislation to address the growing problem of illegal aliens passed the House yesterday by a vote of 123-51.

 

The Bill will:

The Georgia Security and Immigration Compliance Act (Senate Bill 529) would do several things:

1. Discourage businesses from hiring illegal immigrants by prohibiting employers from receiving state income tax benefits if they hire undocumented workers.

2. Require proof of legal residence for anyone older than 18 who seeks public benefits. Prenatal care would be exempt. The courts have ruled that illegal immigrants are entitled to a K-12 education and emergency medical care.

3. Require that public contractors use only workers who are in the country legally. It would not hold a contractor responsible for a subcontractor who hires illegal immigrants.

4. Empowers the Georgia Department of Labor to establish the Georgia Immigrant Worker Verification system to verify that employers with public contracts only employ workers legally in the country.

5. Require verification of the legal status of any person jailed for a felony or DUI.

6. Establish penalties for human trafficking. Penalties of up to 20 years in prison would be imposed for anyone who recruits or transports a person who is subjected to forced labor.

7. Place a 5 percent fee on wire transfers of money to a foreign nation when the sender cannot prove legal status in the

8. Regulates the "notarios" industry which provides immigration assistance services.

 

Senator Rogers has come under virulent attacks due to his stand on this issue.  Including a map of his neighborhood and home printed in a Hispanic newspaper.  Please send a note congratulating Chip to chiprogers21@comcast.net.

 

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S. B. 596, Senator David Shafer’s bill to provide funding for and storing of postnatal tissue passed out of Rep. Sharon Cooper’s committee last night.  This bill will require doctors to inform mothers-to-be that their postnatal tissue can be donated to a cord blood bank where the stem cells will be extracted and used for medical research.  The umbilical cord, placental tissue and amniotic fluid are rich in stem cells and are being thrown away.  This legislation provides for a moral and ethical way to further science without the destruction of human embryos.

 

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S. B. 429, the Full Disclosure Ultrasound Bill, will be heard in committee today.  This bill will provide the opportunity for any woman seeking an abortion to have an ultra-sound so that she is fully informed as to the status of her baby.

Please pray that this legislation passes out of committee and passes in the House.

 

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OTHER BILLS

 

S. B. 425 provides for an email, cell phone, and text messaging registry (voluntary) for any computer that a child under 18 uses or has access.

S. B. 316 prohibits anyone from giving minors a pre-paid card to a minor to access obscene material.

S. B. 456 would make it illegal to give out telephone records of mobile telephone usage unless the subscriber specifically consents.

S. B. 541 requires electronically transmitted obscene material to be labeled ADV:ADLT on the first line.

All of these bills are in the House Non-Civil Judiciary Committee chaired by Rep. David Ralston.  You can call 404-656-5943 (and do it quickly as we are nearing the end of this session) to voice your opinion.

 

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NATIONAL

 

S. 2128, the Lobbying Transparency and Accountability Act, which would regulate grassroots activity in communicating with their elected representatives is being considered in the U. S. Senate.  This bill, introduced by Senator John McCain (R-AZ) supposedly addresses ethics abuses by full-time professional employed lobbyists, but the way it is written could effect lobbying by everyday citizens.

 

Senator McCain, you may remember was one of the authors of the McCain-Feingold act which requires any grassroots organization that spends $25,000 a quarter of $100,000 a year in lobbying efforts to make full disclosure.  At the time, no one thought the U. S. Supreme Court would uphold such legislation as it is an infringement on the First Amendment and freedom of speech.  But they did.  This is another effort to silence our voices and to stop our participation in the legislative process by lobbying our representatives.  Please call Senators Chambliss at 202-224-3521 and Isakson at 202-224-3643 to voice your opposition to this bill.

 

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The following article from today’s Washington Post is rather lengthy, but worth reading.  It is about Senator Johnny Isakson’s stand on illegal immigration and securing our borders.  It also outlines some of the legislation that is going to be debated on this topic next week on the floor of the U. S. Senate.

 

Immigration Debate Is Shaped by '08 Election Presidential Hopefuls Offer Their Proposals Ahead of Senate Vote

 

By Jonathan Weisman and Jim VandeHei

Washington Post Staff Writers

Friday, March 24, 2006; A01

 

President Bush's effort to secure lawful employment opportunities for illegal immigrants is evolving into an early battle of the 2008 presidential campaign, as his would-be White House successors jockey for position ahead of next week's immigration showdown in the Senate.

 

Bush called on Congress yesterday to tone down the increasingly sharp and divisive rhetoric over immigration, as he renewed his push for a guest-worker plan that would allow millions of illegal immigrants to continue working in the . But Bush's political sway is already weakened by public unease about the war in and by Republican divisions.

 

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), whom Bush helped elect as party leader, is threatening to bring a new immigration bill to the Senate floor early next week. It would tighten control of the nation's borders without creating the guest-worker program the president wants.

 

Meanwhile, Sen. John McCain (Ariz.), a rival of Frist's for the Republican nomination, is promoting Bush's call for tougher border security and the guest-worker program as he embraces the president to shore up his standing with Republican leaders. In the House, Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.) is garnering support for a long-shot presidential bid with his fierce anti-immigration rhetoric.

 

And after weeks of sitting on the sidelines, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton

(D-N.Y.) jumped into the immigration debate Wednesday. She declared that Republican efforts to criminalize undocumented workers and their support networks "would literally criminalize the good Samaritan and probably even Jesus himself."

 

Presidential politics "makes it that much more difficult, of course,"

said Rep. Jim Kolbe (R-Ariz.), a strong Bush ally on the issue. "You would hope three years out that we could tamp that out and focus on the policy questions at stake, but maybe that's not possible."

 

For Republican presidential candidates, immigration offers up a difficult choice: Appeal to conservatives eager to clamp down on illegal immigration who could buoy your position in the primaries, or take a moderate stand to win independents and the growing Latino vote, which could be vital to winning the general election.

 

"The short-term politics of this are pretty clear. The long-term politics are pretty clear. And they're both at odds," said Mike Buttry, a spokesman for Sen. Chuck Hagel ( Neb. ), another potential GOP presidential candidate.

 

Senators had hoped to avoid such acrimony when the Judiciary Committee began drafting its immigration bill early this month. Committee Chairman Arlen Specter (R-Pa.) had vowed to write a bipartisan proposal that would bridge conservative demands for much tougher border enforcement with calls from both parties for a guest-worker program to meet the demand for unskilled labor and to address the 12 million illegal immigrants living in the.

 

But after progress slowed, Frist short-circuited the process. He announced that the Senate will take up border security and immigration enforcement measures on Tuesday -- without a guest-worker component -- if Specter cannot produce a bill by Monday.

 

Frist has not ruled out a guest-worker program. But conservatives' grumbling about the president's program found a Senate voice yesterday when Sen. Johnny Isakson (R-Ga.) announced that he will not accept such a program until "we have proven without a doubt that our borders are sealed and secure."

 

At the same time, Senate Minority Leader Harry M. Reid (D-Nev.) promised this week to filibuster Frist's enforcement-only bill.

 

"If the majority leader is . . . going to bring his own bill to the floor, dealing with only one of the problems we have with immigration, then I will use every procedural means at my disposal to stop that,"

Reid said on CNN.

 

The fight next week will test Republican unity on an issue with social, political and national security implications. Adding to the tumult will be House Republican leaders, who muscled through an immigration enforcement bill in December and plan a series of events in the coming days to trumpet border security.

 

The debate will also serve as a test of Bush's ability to sway an increasingly restive Republican Congress on an issue he has championed since his first term. In recent months, under pressure from GOP lawmakers, Bush has retreated from focusing mostly on the guest-worker program to giving equal billing to border security.

 

"But part of enforcing our borders is to have a guest-worker program that encourages people to register their presence so that we know who they are, and says to them, 'If you're doing a job an American won't do, you're welcome here for a period of time to do that job,' " Bush said after meeting with groups involved in the immigration fight.

 

The leading bills all seek to bolster border enforcement with more police on the frontier and more technology tracking illegal crossings.

But a bill co-sponsored by McCain and Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) breaks with Specter's proposal by offering an easier road to citizenship for illegal immigrants already in the country.

 

Specter also goes further to exact punishment on illegal immigrants who seek to obtain a guest-worker permit, and his measure could punish those who help illegal immigrants, even church groups that offer shelter.

Frist has taken the border security and immigration enforcement provisions from Specter's bill, while leaving behind his guest-worker program.

 

Guest-worker proposals would allow businesses to offer special work visas to illegal immigrants already in the country if they can show that workers will not take the positions. The visas would last for up to six years under the leading Senate proposals, but senators are divided over whether workers would have to return to their home countries for a year before qualifying for a renewal.

 

White House aides said Bush remains deeply committed to the guest-worker program, despite resistance from conservatives, and is certain it will help expand the party's support in Florida and in the Southwest, which is emerging as a key battleground in national elections.

 

Former congressman Timothy J. Roemer (D-Ind.) said the debate over welfare reform in the 1990s should serve as the model for compromise on immigration today.

 

"The middle of the Republican Party and the Democratic Party have a responsibility to tackle and solve this issue," he said.

 

Kolbe said it is increasingly unlikely Congress will reach an agreement that could make it to the president's desk.

 

"I don't think this fire is easily extinguished," he said. "Rarely have I seen an issue that divides people so clearly, with so little possibility of seeking a middle ground."

Thank you for Keeping The Faith.
Sadie Fields