Media Search:



Report Explains the Financial Cost of Illegal Immigrants for American Taxpayers – Washington Free Beacon

BY: Nick Bolger February 21, 2017 10:09 am

A new studyfrom the Center for Immigration Studies reportsthat a border wall could save U.S. taxpayers $64 million over the next decade. The author of the report, director of research Steven Camarota, joined Cheryl Casone of Fox Business on Fridayto discuss the costs associated with illegal immigrants.

"We do have a pretty good idea based on a variety of sources of the likely education level of illegal immigrants and there is already an existing body of research that estimates the fiscal impact of illegal immigrants by education or immigrants in general," Camerota began.

"The National Academy of Sciences just did a study last year on how much immigrants pay in taxes and use in services by education," he said. "Once you know the education level of illegal immigrants and then you plug it in and you can come up with an estimate."

Casone asked Camarota to further explainhow the cost of an illegal immigrant accumulates.

"So a big part of it is they just don't pay much in taxes because of their education levels and that's why the costs accumulate," Camarota said. "Because they are creating costs for everything from fire, police protection, they do get some welfare programs, healthcare costs, and then they're not paying that much even when they're paid on the books."

Discussing the opposition to immigration enforcement, Camarota blamed a small number of vocal activists.

"Because in the view of advocates for illegal aliens, if any illegal immigrant has to go home it's a tragedy. The impact on American workers, or as this study points out, the impact on taxpayers, don't concern them. What ICE is doing is trying to save taxpayers money by making illegal immigrants go home," Camarota concluded.

More:
Report Explains the Financial Cost of Illegal Immigrants for American Taxpayers - Washington Free Beacon

HR McMaster, Mike Pence, Vitaly Churkin: Your Tuesday Briefing – New York Times


New York Times
HR McMaster, Mike Pence, Vitaly Churkin: Your Tuesday Briefing
New York Times
Vice President Mike Pence was in Brussels on Monday, and he tried to reassure the European Union of American support. Norma McCorvey, the anonymous plaintiff in Roe v. Wade, died in Texas at age 69. The landmark 1973 Supreme Court ruling that ...
Trump weighs security adviser options; Pence 'disappointed' by FlynnAOL News

all 817 news articles »

Visit link:
HR McMaster, Mike Pence, Vitaly Churkin: Your Tuesday Briefing - New York Times

Will it soon be Donald Trump vs. Mike Pence? – Chicago Tribune

Not by accident did President Donald Trump bring up Hillary Clinton's name multiple times at his mind-numbing news conference. Trump has been in office four weeks. He won the election 3 1/2 months ago. Nevertheless, his still feels compelled to bring up his former opponent.

"We had Hillary Clinton give Russia 20 percent of the uranium in our country," he said. "You know what uranium is, right? This thing called nuclear weapons, and other things. Like, lots of things are done with uranium, including some bad things. Nobody talks about that."

He's unintelligible and wrong, but his supporters hear: Hillary Clinton gave away uranium. (By the way, during her tenure at State, a sale of a Canadian company with mines in the United States was approved. The sale was to Russian oligarchs. Yes, it's bad to give Russians a strategic boost, Mr. President.)

Again bringing up Clinton, Trump said at one point, "Hillary Clinton did a reset, remember? With the stupid plastic button that made us all look like a bunch of jerks. Here, take a look. He looked at her like, 'What the hell is she doing with that cheap plastic button?' Hillary Clinton. That was the reset. Remember it said 'Reset'? Now if I do that oh, I'm a bad guy."

Huh? He does want to do a sort of reset, in fact. The critique makes little sense other than as a critique of her prop, but again he in effect tells his base: Clinton was bad, the worst ever.

His Clinton obsession may be traceable to his popular vote loss, which still gnaws at him. More specifically, he knows a large number of voters chose him only because they thought Clinton was worse. Of the 25 percent of the electorate who voted for one candidate because the other was worse, Trump won 50 percent, Clinton only 39 percent. She won pluralities of voters who either strongly favored or had reservations about the candidate they chose. Surely 78,000 people in three states, enough to swing the electoral college to Clinton, voted for Trump because they thought Clinton was worse. His victory depended on voters afflicted with Hillary Derangement Syndrome. Now he must remind voters why they pulled the lever for him.

Trump, like most demagogues, needs an enemy the elites, the press, Clinton. If he had to survive on his own merits and accomplishments, he'd flop. Press or Trump? Clinton or Trump? It's all a tactic to keep his own popularity high, or as high as it can be.

Alas, the technique has not really paid off since people tend to judge presidents in office on what they do in office. Trump's historically horrendous approval numbers (38 approve, 56 disapprove in Gallup; Pew had a nearly identical split, 39/56.) As Trump's performance sends more voters, and lawmakers, reeling and the investigation of his and his aides' ties to Russia get underway, we should remember how critical Vice President Mike Pence becomes. If things get really bad impeachment or some 25th Amendment "solution" the choice will not be Trump vs. Clinton. It will be Trump vs. Pence, who'd take over if Trump left or was removed. Uh-oh. Pence is in positive territory (43/39 in the Pollster.com average), and among Republicans, especially those on Capitol Hill, he's exceptionally popular.

If you gave 52 GOP senators a secret ballot and asked if they would prefer Pence or Trump, would Trump get more than a handful of votes? I doubt it. And that, if the facts get dicey and Trump's behavior gets wackier, will be a big problem for Trump. Democrats, as much as they dislike Pence's conservative ideology, would no doubt jump for joy if they got Pence instead of Trump. Republicans would rejoice at the prospect of a "normal' president who might help accomplish their aims.

In other words, if down the road the president continues to unravel, there may be a very big bipartisan consensus to show Trump the door. It's not like they'd be getting Clinton; they'd be getting the not erratic, not flashy, not crazy Mike Pence.

We are along way from any of that, but Trump's barking up the wrong tree if he thinks the ghost of Hillary Clinton will keep his approval rating high. The American people have moved on from the election. Now the question is whether at some point they'll move beyond him into Pence's waiting arms.

Jennifer Rubin writes the Right Turn blog for The Post, offering reported opinion from a conservative perspective.

Related articles:

Trump's reality-TV presidency needs to get real

No, Trump's presidency is not crippled

Trump needs to fire Steve Bannon

Don't confuse Donald Trump's populism with fascism

See the article here:
Will it soon be Donald Trump vs. Mike Pence? - Chicago Tribune

VP Mike Pence offers a curious take on Russia scandal developments – MSNBC


MSNBC
VP Mike Pence offers a curious take on Russia scandal developments
MSNBC
Asked why he fired Michael Flynn, the former White House National Security Advisor, Donald Trump told reporters last week Flynn was doing great work, but he didn't tell the Vice President of the United States the facts. The president added, I fired ...

and more »

Read the original:
VP Mike Pence offers a curious take on Russia scandal developments - MSNBC

Pence has clout in Trump White House, but for how long? – Charlotte Observer


U.S. News & World Report
Pence has clout in Trump White House, but for how long?
Charlotte Observer
Vice President Mike Pence, far right, administers the oath of office to newly confirmed Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Feb. 13, 2017. Mnuchin was accompanied by his fiance, Scottish actress Louise Linton. President Trump made remarks before the ...
Mike Pence deserves better than treatment he is getting from TrumpThe Herald-Times (subscription)

all 45 news articles »

More here:
Pence has clout in Trump White House, but for how long? - Charlotte Observer