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View Full Version : Romney fires landscaper over illegals


Moby
12-05-2007, 10:47 AM
Is this really news worthy? Every American that I know is happy to reap the rewards of having illegal workers. No one seems to complain when they're building our parks, roads, houses, shopping centers or preparing our food.

We happily patronize the establishments that hire them and seem to feel no guilt for it.

Romney hired a landscaping company and surprise, surprise, they had a few undocumented workers working for them. So Rudy made a big stink about it.

What bothers me the most is that Republican voters in the 2000 primary decided that they wanted to have the illegals here. They voted for Bush instead of McCain and if they did even a few minutes worth of home work would have known that Bush would bring illegal workers across the border in record numbers. Now they're bitching about it when they're the ones that made the choice.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20071205/ap_po/romney_illegal_immigrants_10
By GLEN JOHNSON, Associated Press Writer
Wed Dec 5, 7:14 AM ET

MEREDITH, N.H. - Republican Mitt Romney, ridiculed by rival Rudy Giuliani for employing illegal immigrants at his "sanctuary mansion," said he had fired the landscaper for his suburban Boston home after learning for a second time about undocumented workers laboring on the property.

In a statement issued Tuesday after he concluded his campaign appearances for the day, Romney said: "After this same issue arose last year, I gave the company a second chance with very specific conditions. They were instructed to make sure people working for the company were of legal status.

"We personally met with the company in order to inform them about the importance of this matter," he said. "The owner of the company guaranteed us, in very certain terms, that the company would be in total compliance with the law going forward."

Romney termed the recurrence "disappointing and inexcusable." The company, Community Lawn Service of Chelsea, Mass., did not immediately return a call seeking comment.

The former Massachusetts governor has made combatting illegal immigration a core theme of his White House run.

His three-point plan includes building fences along the U.S.-Mexico border; developing a tamperproof ID card so only legal immigrants can work and cutting off federal money to "sanctuary cities" providing safe haven to illegal immigrants.

During a debate last week in St. Petersburg, Fla., Romney chastised Giuliani for continuing sanctuary status for New York while he served as the city's mayor. That prompted Giuliani to accuse Romney of owning a "sanctuary mansion" after The Boston Globe reported last year his landscaper employed illegal workers.

Romney denied the charge, saying he wasn't responsible for a legal company hiring illegal workers. He also grew indignant, trying to turn the criticism against Giuliani.

Romney said it would "not be American" to check the papers of workers employed by a contractor simply because they have a "funny accent."

Yet the paper, in a follow-up report, said it observed at least two illegal workers on Romney's property the morning after the debate, raking leaves from the grass and debris from the tennis court. The newspaper said it had also observed the same workers during the prior two months.

The Globe said it interviewed the two workers and one said he had paid $7,000 to a smuggler to escort him across the desert into Arizona. The other said he had come to the country with a student visa that has since expired.

The newspaper contacted the Romney campaign Tuesday for comment, prompting the candidate to draft a two-paragraph letter to Ricardo Saenz, the company's owner, informing him of the termination.

Saenz is a legal immigrant from Colombia who met Romney by attending his Mormon church. Saenz did not immediately return a call from The Associated Press placed to his company headquarters.

"As soon as we were given credible information that people assigned to work on the governor's property were not of legal status, we acted," Romney spokesman Eric Fehrnstrom said. "The governor has been on the road almost constantly since the beginning the year and hasn't interacted with the people working on his lawn."

Last year, workers said that Romney sometimes waved as they tended to the grounds, occasionally calling out, "Buenos dias," or "Good day." They also said Romney's wife, Ann, brought the workers water one especially hot day.

Katie Levinson, speaking for Giuliani's campaign, said of the recurrence: "I think it speaks for itself."

Todd Harris, speaking for rival Fred Thompson, said: "First Mitt Romney was for illegal immigrants working on his lawn, and then he was against it, then for it, and now I guess he's against it again. Sounds like his position on amnesty."

In fact, Romney's opponents have not accused him of favoring the use of illegal immigrants on his property. Rather, they've asserted he was not sufficiently attentive to the matter and they've cast that as emblematic of softness on illegal immigration.

Cat slave
12-05-2007, 11:14 AM
Well, Mitty Boy, its just a little too much too late!!!:talktothehand:

disrupter
12-05-2007, 12:42 PM
He has singlehandedly reversed the tide of illegals.

Now if you believe that i can get you some nice beach front [swamp] land in Florida.
It is even dry once or twice a year during extremely low tide.

Don't even have to worry about hurricanes, it is already submerged,
hurricanes got nothing on you. You are ahead of the little game they are playing.

Little Red Dog
12-05-2007, 12:49 PM
You know, I can't stand Romney, and even I think this is stretching it. I mean, really, how many rich people investigate the legal status of each and every one of their menial workers. Hell, they only notice them when they ask to be paid a working wage.

The issue they should be focusing on is Romney's reversal on every position of substance since he resigned as Gov of MA, and began running for president. The man dumped every last principle he swore he stood fro when he was running for election as Gov.

Anybody who believes his epiphany from moderate conservative to neo-conservative is purely coincidental with his presidential bid needs to have their head examined.

Moby
12-05-2007, 01:08 PM
I mean, really, how many rich people investigate the legal status of each and every one of their menial workers.
How many people care about companies they support hiring illegals? I don't think this is a rich person issue. I think it's every American citizen willingly, knowingly supports companies that willingly and knowingly employee illegal workers.

Little Red Dog
12-05-2007, 01:18 PM
True words. You got a point.

disrupter
12-05-2007, 03:07 PM
Get this, Tom Tancredo, THE anti-illegal immigration candidate, had a crew of almost exclusively illegal labor to build out his Mansionette.

There is hardly a clean candidate on this issue. I will not be shocked if there are NONE.

America, the land of cheesy corporate mercenaries.

Moby
12-06-2007, 12:02 AM
Get this, Tom Tancredo, THE anti-illegal immigration candidate, had a crew of almost exclusively illegal labor to build out his Mansionette.

There is hardly a clean candidate on this issue. I will not be shocked if there are NONE.

America, the land of cheesy corporate mercenaries.
I don't think that there is a clean American on this issue. Everyone has knowingly benefited from the illegals. We all love having the cheap labor.

The thing fascinates me the most is that the people that voted to have the illegals brought in are the ones that are most against offering them any services.