Illegal deductions targeted
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True to his past stance on illegal immigration, Huntington Beach
Republican Rep. Dana Rohrabacher recently signed on as a cosponsor of
a bill that would prevent employers from deducting from their federal
taxes any wages and benefits paid to illegal immigrants.
The New Illegal Deduction Immigration Act was introduced in late
June by Rep. Steve King (R-Iowa). Rohrabacher has said ending
benefits to illegal immigrants is the best way to deter illegal
immigration, and he wrote a 2004 bill under which hospitals would
have checked the immigration status of patients and shared the
information with the federal government.
“In this day and age, there is simply no excuse for employing
someone of questionable legal status,” Rohrabacher said in a news
release. “This is no longer just a matter of economic security, it is
a matter of national security. This bill will provide consequences
for businesses that knowingly employ illegal aliens, who are a drain
on the system and provide cover for terrorists trying to enter the
U.S.”
FOREVER YOUNG
After winding up three years as president of the Orange County
Young Republicans, Lee Lowrey of Corona del Mar has been elected to a
second two-year term as treasurer of the Young Republican Federation
of California. In the treasurer’s post, Lowrey will keep the group’s
books, handle donations and further the agenda of the group’s new
chairman, Matthew Harper of Huntington Beach.
“The goal is to have an organization in every county in
California,” Lowrey said. “We’re almost there.”
The group won’t need to concentrate on Orange County, where the
Young Republicans have a robust membership of more than 300 people.
So, exactly how young are young Republicans? Lowrey, who just
turned 35, said the bylaws say members must be between 18 and 40
years old, but Orange County’s members tend to be in their late 20s
to early 30s.
THE CAMPBELL STRIKES BACK
With apparent unconcern that they might appear to protest too
much, campaign consultants for state Sen. John Campbell on Tuesday
ripped a recent poll that said former Assemblywoman Marilyn Brewer
could beat Campbell in a Congressional race. Campbell and Brewer are
running for the House seat likely to be vacated if Rep. Chris Cox is
confirmed as chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
A statement from Campbell consultants Dave Gilliard and Chris
Wysocki said a poll commissioned by Brewer skewed results by listing
former Rep. Jim Rogan -- who has said he’s not running -- as a
candidate, and for mischaracterizing Campbell’s positions on various
issues.
“In a sense, the survey commissioned by Marilyn Brewer concluded
that if people believed everything good about Marilyn Brewer,
everything bad about John Campbell, if Jim Rogan were in the race,
and John Campbell did nothing over the course of the campaign, the
end result would be within the margin of error,” the statement read.
GOING OUT FOR A DRIVE
Opponents of Armando Ruiz, the Coast Community College District
trustee whose retirement and subsequent reelection offended many in
the district, have begun their petition drive to recall him from
office.
Twenty people -- including fellow trustee Jerry Patterson, Share
Our Selves founder Jean Forbath and Newport-Mesa Unified School
District board member Martha Fluor -- signed a petition. Political
consultant David Kidd, who is leading the drive, said althoughthe law
requires him to garner 36,000 signatures, he would push for 45,000 to
have a margin for error.
Kidd and Patterson said the petitioners had started accumulating
signatures among friends and would expand through mailers and
door-to-door lobbying.
“It’s a grass-roots movement,” Kidd said. “A lot of it is word of
mouth and networking.”
Many in the district and the community were angry with Ruiz in
October when he retired from two state jobs simultaneously -- his
trustee job with the college district and a full-time counseling
position with the South Orange County Community College District --
which allowed him to receive full pensions for both jobs. He then ran
for reelection to the board of trustees and won as an incumbent.
-- Staff writer Michael Miller
contributed to this story.
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