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The Democratic proposals on health explicitly prohibit spending any federal money to help illegal immigrants get health care. Still, Republicans say there aren't sufficient citizenship verification requirements to ensure illegal immigrants are excluded. Gov. Tim Pawlenty, a Minnesota Republican who might seek the White House in 2012, said Wilson's concern is valid. "Even if you have language that says illegal immigrants will not be a part of this program, unless you have the enforcement mechanism in place, it doesn't mean much," Pawlenty said. "In Minnesota, we have laws that say illegal immigrants won't get many services, but unless somebody actually checks
-- guess what -- they show up and they get the services." A spokesman for House GOP leader John Boehner of Ohio said it's time to move on. Wilson said he allowed emotions to get away from him and compared his outburst to the outbursts that dominated coverage of August's town hall meetings, when members of Congress were on the receiving end of screaming and shouting over the health care proposals. But he added: "I will not be muzzled. I'm going to be speaking on behalf of the American people, but I will be doing it very civilly."
Wilson said his critics want to use the incident to silence opponents of health care reform. His Democratic challenger, Rob Miller, raised more than $1 million -- more money than the roughly $625,000 he spent for a 2008 race he lost with 46 percent of the vote. Wilson appeared on "Fox News Sunday." Cornyn was on NBC's "Meet the Press." Pawlenty was interviewed on ABC's "This Week."
[Associated
Press;
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