Related link: Pelosi and Schumer advise Republicans
So, how's the amnesty push materializing in the House? Well, one House Republican, who has joined another Gang of Democratic open-borders malcontents, admits that he doesn't even know what everything means in his own damn bill. That tells you all you need to know...
Breitbart: A Republican member of the Gang of 7 in the House acknowledged on Friday that there were things in the comprehensive immigration bill he is helping to draft that even he did not understand.Then here's some sound advice: If you don't know what's in it, DON'T VOTE FOR THE DAMN THING! Boy, not only do I question how these kind of people get elected, but what does that say about their competition?
Rep. John Carter (R-TX), while saying the House bill would have border security "triggers" without offering specifics, acknowledged, "There are things in the bill that I don't know what they mean because I'm not an immigration lawyer.”
Carter's comment emphasizes how difficult it is for legislators to not only read the bill but to fully understand what they are voting for.
So, I review all of that to get to this: How does this amnesty push fair for Republicans' future? Piss poorly is one way to describe it...
TheHill: A new poll of likely Hispanic voters in the 2016 presidential election shows strong support for the two candidates seen as potential Democratic nominees: former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Vice President Biden.Kind of backs up Pelosi's admission, no? You can read the stats produced in this survey, but basically, it demonstrates that these Republican turncoats didn't gain a single advantage among the so-called Hispanic vote...but they did succeed in making it even more difficult to win national elections, particularly a presidential one, with illegals gaining citizens' rights. Still think the Democrats are out for your best interests, RINOs?
The survey, by Latino Decisions, also revealed Republican candidates continue to significantly trail among Hispanic voters, with even champions of immigration reform like Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush significantly behind top Democrats.