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Amnesty doesn’t work

June 26, 2007 | By Nathaniel Ward

“Amnesty doesn’t work,” Heritage scholar and former Attorney General Edwin Meese says in a new video. “It only encourages more people to come into the United States.”

“Amnesty doesn’t work,” Heritage scholar and former Attorney General Edwin Meese says in a new video. “It only encourages more people to come into the United States.”

Watch the full video of Ed Meese online

The Heritage Foundation needs your help to spread the word about the consequences of the immigration bill. Here’s two ways you can help:

  • Forward the video of Ed Meese to your friends
  • Encourage them to sign up for MyHeritage.org e-mails

Immigration update

The revived “compromise” immigration bill passed an early test today when Senators voted 64-35 to reopen debate. They will spend the next two days discussing the legislation and considering amendments before a procedural vote Thursday and a possible final vote Friday.

Click here for a list of Heritage’s latest analysis of the immigration proposal.

J.C. Watts on why Heritage matters

The Heritage Foundation forms a vital part of the conservative movement, former Rep. J.C. Watts said in a wide-ranging speech to Heritage members in New York last Thursday.

Watch the video of J.C. Watts’ speech online

 

Read more about Watts’ remarks

—By DeEtte Chatterton and Nathaniel Ward

Good news on spending

With the liberal Congress pushing its radical agenda, it’s refreshing to see that one group of lawmakers is actually standing up for conservative values.

Heritage’s Rob Bluey points out that conservatives in the House of Representatives are holdin firm on out-of-control spending—and their stand has worked. “House Republicans have coalesced around the issue of federal spending, handing Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) a stinging defeat on earmark reform and sending their liberal colleagues a unified message not to exceed the president's budget requests.”

Conservatives scored a triumph, he explains, when they “managed to round up 147 members to sign a letter vowing to uphold the president’s veto of spending bills that exceed his budget requests. That’s one member more than the 146 needed to sustain a veto.”

But he warns that it’s too early to celebrate, since liberals still have every intention of ramming through bloated big-government spending bills.

Remembering Russell Kirk

Speaking at the Heritage Foundation last week, scholar and noted author George Nash recounted Russell Kirk’s remarkable life and his essential conservative writings.

“On the issues that truly mattered, Russell Kirk stood his ground, and because he did, we his grateful heirs can carry on,” said Nash, one of the conservative movement’s foremost historians.

Read more about Kirk’s conservative legacy.

—By DeEtte Chatterton

In other news

Coming up at Heritage

To attend the following Heritage Foundation events, RSVP at Heritage’s events website. Or you can watch these events live online at Heritage.org.  All times are Eastern.

Nathaniel Ward is the Editor of MyHeritage.org—a website for members and supporters of The Heritage Foundation. DeEtte Chatterton contributed to this report.