U.S. Must Pressure Mexico, Marin Says
In her first major policy speech, GOP candidate for Senate race addresses illegal immigration and the Mexican economy.
By Jean O. Pasco
Times Staff Writer
The United States must increase pressure on Mexico to improve its economic
conditions and discourage illegal immigration, Republican U.S. Senate candidate
Rosario
Marin said Thursday in her first major policy speech of the campaign.
The root cause of such movement has been masked by the contentious debates
over immigrant driver's licenses and President Bush's proposal for a temporary
guest-worker program, she said.
"As an immigrant from Mexico whose first language was Spanish, I know
firsthand the reasons why people leave," she said in a speech at the Richard
Nixon Library &
Birthplace in Yorba Linda.
"My parents left because there was no hope to improve our poor economic conditions…. My adopted mother country gave the opportunities that Mexico couldn't."
Marin, who immigrated legally to the U.S. with her family when she was
14, is one of 10 Republican candidates hoping to face Democratic incumbent
Barbara Boxer in
November. The GOP primary is March 2.
Of the four major GOP candidates, Marin — a former U.S. treasurer under
Bush — is the only one to support the president's guest-worker proposal.
Former
Assemblyman Howard Kaloogian of Carlsbad has denounced the plan as
unworkable and immoral; former Secretary of State Bill Jones and former
Los Altos Hills
Mayor Toni Casey have been supportive of Bush but critical that the
plan might create another amnesty program.
Marin reiterated her support for the Bush proposal Thursday but insisted
that Mexico bears more responsibility for illegal immigration than the
U.S. She said Mexico
must reduce the tax burden on low- and middle-income residents, encourage
private investment in industries such as energy and do more to police its
own porous border.
She acknowledged that Congress has no authority over Mexico's domestic
policies but said pressure could be applied through strings on economic
aid and treaties.
Because of her immigrant background, she said, politicians on both
sides of the border will listen to her.
Among reforms needed, she said, is the renegotiation of an extradition
agreement with Mexico that allows each country to refuse to surrender suspects
facing the death
penalty. Mexican courts expanded that to include anyone facing a life
prison term, that country's most severe sentence.
Her proposal follows by two months a similar effort by U.S. Sen. Dianne
Feinstein (D-Calif.). There are 360 major-crime suspects living in Mexico
that should be
returned to the U.S. for trial, according to federal authorities, including
Armando Garcia, suspected of killing Los Angeles County Deputy Sheriff
David March in April
2002.
Marin also proposed returning illegal immigrants convicted of crimes
to Mexico to serve their sentences. A second treaty with Mexico requires
prisoners to agree to
transfers before they can be moved to their home country; that too
must be changed, she said.
But Marin demurred when asked by reporters after her speech about a
related issue: giving driver's licenses to illegal immigrants. Marin opposed
a bill signed by
then-Gov. Gray Davis last year allowing such licenses.
She refused to say, however, how she would vote on legislation introduced
in September by Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Colo.). It would withhold up to 25%
of a state's
federal highway funds if it allows illegal immigrants to obtain driver's
licenses.
"I understand the frustration people have, but it's not dealing with the root of the problem," she said of the Tancredo bill.
Jones' campaign has criticized Marin for refusing to address the driver's
license issue. Jones has opposed the issuance of driver's licenses to illegal
immigrants, but a
spokeswoman said his views on the Tancredo bill are not known.