Minnesota gubernatorial candidate says he will
withdraw state from refugee program, by Ann Corcoran 7/13/18.
It
is a good campaign message, but in reality will get MN nowhere. How quickly
people forget that in the last few years three other Republican governors made
a big show out of withdrawing their states from the federal program (Texas,
Kansas, New Jersey) and of course they still get refugees with Texas presently
being the top ‘welcoming’ state in the nation.
Don’t
get me wrong, there are political considerations for Mr. Johnson as he is up
against former governor Tim Pawlenty in the primary, it is definitely
worth discussing in the campaign. And, as governor there will be many
things the state government could do to rein-in the program by reforming the
state’s welfare system, etc.
Indeed, Pawlenty was a Republican establishment
governor of the state during the expansion of refugee resettlement to St. Cloud
and must have known what was happening. I would say look to his campaign donors
and see if he was being funded by big business (poultry!) interests looking for
a steady supply of cheap labor to the St. Cloud area. I presume Mr. Johnson has some good
investigators at work to discover Pawlenty’s ties to the program while he was
governor. LOL! Any photos of Pawlenty snuggling with the Lutheran
resettlement people?
Actually,
I don’t mean to get into a long detailed discussion when I don’t know much
about MN politics, but the bottom line is that there is not one silver bullet to save
Minnesota. It will take a concerted effort and lots of really
hard work by dedicated individuals and groups at all political levels to turn
this ship now.
And,
a very important effort will be to make the issue of refugee
resettlement/states rights a talking point throughout the gubernatorial
campaign as a way of further educating the voters.
From KNSI radio: CANDIDATE WOULD WORK TO END REFUGEE
RESETTLEMENT (KNSI) – Gubernatorial candidate Jeff Johnson
says, if elected, he’ll head to Washington, DC and tell the government that
Minnesota is no longer participating in the Refugee Resettlement Program.
“And
just set forth the story, and say here is what we’ve done, we’ve done more than
any other state by a lot and now we’re no longer interested in participating. I
think the Trump administration would work with us on that.”
On
with KNSI’s Ox in the Afternoon, the Hennepin County Commissioner says the
program has greatly affected the St. Cloud area and it’s simply not working for
Minnesotans.
“To
suggest that this is about race or anything else, it’s not, it’s about just
being realistic and saying what is this costing, and we don’t know the answer
to that because the government won’t tell us.”
He
says Minnesota has the highest number of refugees per capita in the country,
and has taken in more secondary refugees than all other states combined.
“Minnesota has 2 percent of the nation’s population, yet 13 percent of
the nation’s refugees.” Johnson says, while immigration is governed by
federal law, that doesn’t mean that we just roll over as a state any longer. Listen to Ox’s full interview with
Johnson here.
If
you have a week, here is my Minnesota
archive for your reading pleasure.
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