Wednesday, April 30, 2008

URGENT! IMMEDIATE ACTION NEEDED- E-MAILS TO LOU DOBBS TO DEMAND FLA.HOUSE SPKR. RUBIO ALLOW 6 IMMIGRSATION BILLS TO BE HEARD!

URGENT ! IMMEDIATE ACTION NEEDED, E-MAILS TO
LOU DOBBS!

Apr.30, 2008 - IMMIGRATION CONTROL FLORIDA
SUBSCRIBERS & AFFILIATED IMMIGRATION CONTROL GPS.

The Florida State Legislature ends MAY 2nd ! We only
have 2 days left to get a FLORIDA IMMIGRATION BILL
HEARD & PASSED!

To do this we must get "national attention" from LOU DOBBS on his
CNN-TV program to embarrass key leaders holding up the 5 State

House Bills. Please copy the following message to LOU DOBBS
shown below and paste it onto an Email and send it to LOU DOBBS
at:
LouDobbs@CNN.com

Please ask everyone on your Email to do the same. We need
thousands of Emails to Lou Dobbs.


Also, listen to Lou Dobbs on www.LouDobbsRadio.com on
weekdays from 1 to 4 pm EDST on the internet.
Call him on Tel. Call-in # 1-877-553-6227.

It is best to call him when he first begins before the calls stack up.

Read him the Email shown below that I am asking you to send
Lou and tell him that it is highly urgent that he announces the
facts in the Email or the Florida Immigration Bill will be dead for
2008.


ImmigrationControlFlorida.com
Email: ImmigrationControlFlorida@gmail.com


Note: Copy and paste only the text SHOWN BELOW and send it in an Email to LOU DOBBS,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Apr. 30, 2008
Mr. LOU DOBBS
CNN-TV
LouDobbs@CNN.com

Mr.Dobbs:

The voters and taxpayers of Florida urgently need your help
in using your national CNN-TV broadcast to pressure 4 defiant
Hispanic Fla. State Representatives blocking 6 Florida
Immigration Enforcement Bills from even being heard by 120

Reps.in the Florida House but the House Speaker MARCO RUBIO
& his Rules Chairman, DAVID RIVERA were so brazen, they
pulled 6 seperate Immigration Bills from their respecive
House Committees to keep them from even being heard!

This is un-Democratic and anti-American and more like a
dictatorship for which these 4 Hispanic Reps. continuously
scream
about!

These are the tactics used in 3rd World Countries and not
supposed to occur in the USA!


We urgently need you to embarrass and pressure the 4 key

leaders holding up Hearings & votes on 6 Immigration
Enforcement Bills shown below.

The key Republican Hispanic leaders from Miami, Fla. blocking the
6 Immigration Enforcement Bills are:

State House Speaker MARCO RUBIO , his Rules Chmn. Rep.DAVID RIVERA and Rep. JUAN ZAPATA, Chairman of the Miami-Dade
County, Florida Deligation and Rep.J.C. PLANAS, Chairman of the Fla.State House HISPANIC CAUCUS! Planas said State Fla. Reps.
and their supporters are using the "immigration issue"to get elected!

All 4 Hispanic Republicans from Miami, Florida say that voters who
want a Florida Immigration Bill to stop "illegal aliens" are
ANTI-HISPANIC !!!!! Who on earth are these State Representatives
representing? HISPANIC's ONLY? ...or American "legal citizen
taxpayers" losing jobs, services and homes to "illegal aliens" ?
Anti-Hispanic for wanting our Imigration Laws enforced?


Did these 4 Miami Hispanic State Reps. take their"oath-of-allegiance"
to the "Hispanic empire" or that of the "State of Florida" and the "U.S.
Constitution" when they put their hand on the bible? Who are these
Reps. to decide that all 120 Fla. State Reps. may not hear 5 seperate
Reps. IMMIGRATION BILLS # HB73- HB107- HB159- HB571 & HB821
when a FLORIDA POLL says that a majority of 76 percent of Florida's
taxpayers & voters want an IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT BILL and Immigration Laws enforced!

Four Miami Hispanic Fla. State Reps. are operating in defiance
of their sworn Florida oath-of-allegiance" and in defiance of 76
percent of Floridians who demand a Florida Immigration Enforcement Bill to stop jobs, services and increased taxes that "illegal aliens" cause.

The 5 Immigration Enforcement Bills would:
(1) Prohibit employers from hiring"illegal aliens".
(2) Prohibit "illegal aliens" from being hired.
(3) Prohibit services to "illegal aliens".
(4) Prohibit Hiring Facilities that hire "illegal aliens"
(5) Permit government agency workers to ask persons if they are
a U.S. citizen.
In 2007- 244 immigration bills were passed in 46 states! Why not in Fla.?
The U.S.government is not Enforcing our Immigration Laws, so the states must do it.

LOU,we urgently need you to announce this factual data"immediately" before the 4 Miami Hispanic State House Rep's. kill the bills for 2008!
The Fla. Legislature ends May 2nd !

Sincerely

Print Name:________________________
Email only:_________________________



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

IMMIGRATION
Miami-Dade lawmakers stymie immigration bills
Bills targeting illegal immigration have yet to make much headway in the state Legislature.
The Miami Herald, Apr. 17, 2008
By LAURA FIGUEROA
lfigueroa@MiamiHerald.com
TALLAHASSEE --
Just listen and don't make any noise.
Earlier in the year, before heading to Tallahassee, that was the approach Miami-Dade legislators decided to take on a series of proposed bills they oppose dealing with the issue of illegal immigration.

The strategy may have worked.

With less than a week to go for a series of immigration bills to be approved for final votes on the House floor, the prospects of the measures passing are
''slim to none,'' said Rep. David Rivera, a Miami Republican who chairs the House Rules and Calendar committee, which decides when bills get heard.

''The last thing we wanted was to come up here and start drawing lines and making noise,'' said Rep. Juan Zapata, a Miami Republican and chairman of the Miami-Dade delegation.

``That's exactly what these people wanted -- the attention. It's an election year, and immigration is an easy issue to press on.''

DETAILS

The dozen bills being pitched in the House and Senate would increase employer verification requirements, give local law enforcement agencies more authority to check for immigration status of people pulled over for DUIs, and ban county or city funding for day-laborer centers such as one that exists in South Dade.

Florida lawmakers looking to pass bills targeted at curbing illegal immigration faced one major hurdle this session -- convincing South Florida legislators, who hold key leadership positions in the House and Senate, to support their cause.

Without the backing of House Speaker Marco Rubio, the first Cuban-American to hold the position, the bills failed to get any major play in their committees. Six weeks into the session, a three-hour workshop was held on the six House bills, but even that failed to produce its desired intent of combining the bills into one larger committee bill.

NOT ON THE LIST

''Speaker Rubio outlined the priorities of the session and this didn't fall under that list,'' said Rivera, one of Rubio's lieutenants.

Cities and states across the country have been passing a patchwork of immigration enforcement laws in record numbers -- 244 immigration bills were passed in 46 states in 2007 according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

All the more reason for Florida to jump on board to pass its own legislation, says Rep. Gayle Harrell, a Jupiter Republican, proposing a bill that among other things would require state agencies to verify the citizenship of any public assistance applicant older than 14. ''We're frustrated that it hasn't moved faster,'' said Harrell, who added that she' prepared to fight for the bill for the rest of the session.

`LITTLE MEXICO'

Her pitch -- and those of legislators backing such bills, including Rep. Don Brown, a DeFuniak Springs Republican and Sen. Michael Bennett, a Bradenton Republican -- might appeal to voters who say they are fed up with illegal immigrants encroaching on their communities.

''My town is now called Little Mexico,'' Deland resident Ann Lambertson told legislators at the immigration hearing.

`ACCURATE FACTS'

The Florida Legislative Hispanic Caucus, to which most Dade legislators belong, opposes the bills.

The group has also taken a similar wait-and-see approach to the measures, noting that it would be ''prepared to provide accurate facts about the benefits that immigration has provided to Florida,'' said Rep. J.C. Planas, a Miami Republican who chairs the Florida State House Hispanic Caucus.

''I find it ironic that looking back at the presidential election, the two candidates that spoke the most about immigration as an issue, TomTancredo and Mitt Romney, finished last in Florida,'' Planas said.

``Tancredo didn't even get to Florida, and Romney didn't win here.

Obviously its not that big of a political issue that the public is concerned about in lieu of the economy.










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