Thursday, August 5, 2010

GOP Senate leader, stung, falls back to "let's have hearings on doing something nobody wants to do."

Mitch McConnell's walking back his brainwave over repealing the 14th Amendment even though it will cost him almost no votes among blacks or gays. Bad internal polling results?

Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell is playing down his party's new scrutiny of the 14th Amendment, which among other things confers U.S. citizenship on anyone born in the United States. McConnell on Thursday portrayed calls for hearings on the amendment as simply an attempt to examine what he calls the "unseemly" business of foreigners showing up just in time to have their babies, then going back home. 
"I'm not aware of anybody who's come out for altering the 14th Amendment," McConnell said at a breakfast sponsored by the Christian Science Monitor. He said the push for hearings stems from a Washington Post story about foreign businesses that supply visas to expectant mothers. "This is the kind of thing that irritates Americans quite a lot," he said. "I don't think having hearings on an obvious unseemly business is a threat to the 14th Amendment. What's wrong with looking into this? The Post did." 
McConnell added that "the remedy for it is not yet clear. But I am not advocating revisiting the 14th Amendment and I don't think any others have. I think the view is, why don't we take a look at this?" 

No comments:

Post a Comment