On September 26, 2007 I wrote this post, Is the DREAM Act Dead?
Well. It wasn’t:
Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) filed to invoke cloture on S. 2205, Assistant Majority Leader Dick Durbin’s (D-Ill.) new stand-alone DREAM Act amnesty bill. The cloture vote, for which 60 YES votes are necessary to prevent a filibuster on the measure, is set for Wednesday, October 24. Reid is attempting to bring this nightmarish amnesty bill to the floor under Senate Rule XIV without it ever having been debated in committee.
Thankfully, the DREAM Act was rejected today. Again.
Though I doubt it’s actually really dead this time either. Those Dems are bound and determined to ram this act down our throats, despite the fact that most Americans do not support the amnsety that this act promises.
I was exceptionally disappointed to see that our Senior Senator from Tex, Kay Baily Hutchinson, decided to vote with the open borders Democrats.
I just sent her office this note:
Sen. Hutchinson —
I just read your statement concerning your support for the DREAM Act, and see that you voted with the Democrats on cloture.
As a Republican living in Texas (and writer of the most prominent conservative blog in Austin, TX), I cannot tell you how disappointed I am in your vote.
Perhaps you feel that your recent announcement not to return to the Senate would shield you from the consequences of this vote.
It looks like this vote might be nothing more than your attempt to earn Hispanic votes in your likely run for Governor of Texas.
With illegal immigration being the most pressing state issue facing Texas, I’m sorry to say that I would not be able to support your run for Governor.
Regards,
Robbie Cooper
Her office almost always replies to letters from her constituents, so I’ll be interested to read what she has to say.
Sen. Hutchinson posted this Statement on the DREAM Act today on her Senate web site:
I support the goal of encouraging college education for children whose parents brought them into America illegally, but it is unfair to reward the children of undocumented workers and favor them over the children of legal residents. Today I voted to bring this issue to the floor of the Senate for debate, with the commitment that there is still the opportunity to change the Durbin bill and gain bipartisan consensus.
Though the motion to proceed failed, I will continue to work for fair and comprehensive border security and immigration reform.






FYI - Her statement is at http://hutchison.senate.gov/pr102407a.html.
Left by Ross on October 24th, 2007 at 2:31 pm