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Utah Lawmaker Pushes for Illegal Alien Amnesty 
FoxNews.com
Thursday, April 01, 2004
By Matt Hayes 

On March 24, the House Judiciary Committee held an oversight hearing called �How Would 
Millions of Guest Workers Impact Working Americans and Americans Seeking Employment?� 
 
The hearing took place in connection with various �guest worker� bills pending before 
Congress.  Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, a committee member, has spent extraordinary 
resources trying to convince voters that the bill he co-sponsors is not an amnesty, 
though it would not prosecute the millions of illegal aliens who have committed a 
crime by entering or remaining in the U.S. without a current visa. Instead, it would 
give them a work permit.  

Cannon, a lawmaker, has openly expressed his contempt for the distinction between 
legal and illegal immigration. �We love immigrants in Utah. We don�t make the 
distinction very often between legal and illegal,� he said on June 6, 2002, as he 
received an Excellence in Leadership award from MALDEF, the Mexican American Legal 
Defense and Education Fund. Cannon�s remarks are entirely consistent with the beliefs 
of MALDEF�s co-founder, Mario Obledo, who said in June 1998 �California is going to be 
a Hispanic state and anyone who doesn't like it should leave. They should go back to 
Europe.�    

"Reconquista" is a term employed by groups like MALDEF who want to see California and 
its neighboring states annexed, at least culturally, with people free to move there 
from Mexico. If there had ever been doubts that Cannon was doing the bidding of the 
"reconquistadors," they were erased at that hearing. Cannon�s bill, the Agricultural 
Jobs, Opportunity, Benefits, and Security Act of 2003 (AgJOBS,� H.R. 3142 (search), 
would make all foreign nationals who were illegally in the United States between 
February 2002 and January 2003 (which Cannon estimates is 11 million people), and who 
had also worked for 100 days in agriculture, immune from prosecution for the crime of 
entering the U.S. without a current visa, and then give them work permits.  

The bill also mandates payment of a penalty, and Cannon cites this as his reason to 
not label it an amnesty. But under the AgJOBS bill, the normal immigration law that 
prohibits gaining legal immigration status due to unlawful presence would be waived. 
Though this doesn�t fit Cannon�s definition of �amnesty,� it worked for Webster.       
    

Thanks to the House of Representatives� excellent Judiciary Committee Web site, Utah�s 
voters can see the depths to which Chris Cannon is willing to go in an effort to smear 
advocates of immigration reduction as white supremacists. Rep. Cannon employed a line 
of questioning developed by members of the House Un-American Activities Committee in 
the 1950�s. In referring to an umbrella organization of groups that advocate against 
massive, uncontrolled immigration, Cannon asked one witness, �Did you go to lunch with 
other folks that were associated with that umbrella organization?� 

But according to Allison Solin of ProjectUSA, the Washington, DC-based social advocacy 
organization that has five billboards up in Utah�s 3rd Congressional district 
advertising Rep. Cannon�s support for an illegal alien amnesty, Rep. Cannon wants to 
have it both ways. 

�Congressman Cannon objects to our participation in the political debate in Utah and 
calls us an �outside special interest,�� says Ms. Solin. �Yet we�re only Americans 
exercising our democratic rights. On the other hand, Congressman Cannon seems to have 
no problem with �outsiders� as long its cheap foreign labor driving down American 
wages and making life even more difficult for struggling American families.�  

Indeed, most of the hundreds of organizations listed on his website as endorsing his 
AgJOBS amnesty represent industries that stand to profit financially from cheaper 
labor, and some of the groups listed actually work in concert with the government of 
Mexico to influence U.S. immigration policy. 

�In our view,� says Ms. Solin, �those are the real �outside special interests.'� 

The attempt, however, to cast immigration reductionists as white supremacists did 
provide one humorous, if embarrassing, moment in last Wednesday�s House hearing. Rep. 
Cannon was deep into a rambling monologue in which he was attempting to draw links 
between the alleged white supremacists plotting a take-over of the Sierra Club and the 
alleged white supremacists driving the immigration reduction movement. At one point, 
Rep. Cannon, following the Southern Poverty Law Center line, asserted that five 
current candidates for the Sierra Club�s Board of Directors are all members of this 
white supremacist conspiracy. Unbeknownst to him, however, one of those Sierra Club 
candidates was sitting right in front of him at the witness table � Frank Morris, a 
black man who formerly headed the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation. 

Many observers have said that when it comes to illegal immigration, there is very 
little difference between the positions of the two major parties. But voters have a 
choice when it comes to Chris Cannon. Cannon�s positions and rhetoric do not so much 
resemble those of either major political party as those of the radical Left. Again and 
again, he speaks of a Marxist, Open Borders America in which the notion of �illegal 
immigrant� no longer exists. Then he legislates for it.  

Rep. Cannon has found his constituency. It just doesn�t consist of American citizens.  
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 

Matt Hayes began practicing immigration law shortly after graduating from Pace 
University School of Law in 1994, representing new immigrants in civil and criminal 
matters. He is the author of The New Immigration Law and Practice, to be published in 
October. 





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