Ad
invokes Reagan to attack Republicans' hard line on immigration
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[September 14, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Days before a
Republican presidential debate at the Ronald Reagan Library, an
immigration advocacy group invoked the former president to attack the
tough immigration rhetoric of certain candidates, including front-runner
Donald Trump.
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A television ad launched on Sunday by the National Immigration
Forum Action Fund contrasts Reagan's call for the United States to
welcome all people with the stances of Trump, Wisconsin Governor
Scott Walker and Texas Senator Ted Cruz, who have proposed an end to
birthright citizenship and urged other crackdowns.
The ad highlights Trump's demand for a wall along the U.S.-Mexican
border and comments that Mexican immigrants were "bringing crime"
and are "rapists."
It shows a clip from Reagan's 1989 farewell address from the White
House in which he references the journey to the United States of
John Winthrop, an English Puritan who imagined America as a "city
upon a hill."
Reagan described his idea of the "shining city" as one that was
"teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony and peace."
"If there had to be city walls," he added, "the walls had doors and
the doors were open to anyone with the will and the heart to get
here."
Trump, Walker and Cruz will join other candidates including former
Florida Governor Jeb Bush, former tech executive Carly Fiorina and
retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson for a debate on Wednesday at the
Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Simi Valley, California.
Carson said on CBS's "Face the Nation" on Sunday that Trump's plan
for deporting undocumented workers is logistically unfeasible, but
said he would "turn off the spigot that dispenses the goodies" to
discourage the immigrants from coming to the United States. For
undocumented immigrants already here, he said he would give them a
six-month period to register.
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The Action Fund's ad will screen nationally all week, peaking during
the debate on CNN. The Fund is affiliated with the National
Immigration Forum, a pro-immigration group which counts Bush's son,
Jeb Bush Jr, as one of its directors.
The two entities share the same management and some resources but
have different boards and separate budgets, according to a
spokeswoman, Cathleen Farrell.
Jeb Bush, the candidate, has said Republicans should approach
immigration as an opportunity to spur economic growth.
(Reporting by Krista Hughes and Toni Clarke; Editing by Mary
Milliken and Andrea Ricci)
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