By Ken Blackwell
Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker an expected GOP presidential candidate drew the ire of the political right and left recently over his comments on immigration. When it comes to the immigration issue Republicans are expected to use the tried and true consultant tested secure the border" talking point and move on to other issues.
Gov. Walker like former US Senator Rick Santorum has taken things further than just a discussion of illegal immigration. They have dared to discuss the impact of legal immigration on American workers. Like most Republicans Im still undecided about the Presidential field. But I have an enormous amount of respect for these guys and what they have done as they campaign. I applaud their statements on immigration and their willingness to go against the status quo on immigration.
What radical proposal could have inspired attacks from liberal media outlets like MSNBC Mother Jones magazine and the Huffington Post as well as The Wall Street Journal and establishment Republicans such as Senators Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) and Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT) and ?
In terms of legal immigration how we need to approach that going forward is saying -- the next president and the next Congress need to make decisions about a legal immigration system thats based on first and foremost on protecting American workers and American wages" stated Governor Walker during an interview with Glenn Beck.
According to the elites an immigration system based first and foremost on protecting American workers and American wages is unacceptable. But how does this resonate with voters?
According to a poll last week at Evangelicals for Biblical Immigration evangelical voters a key voting bloc in the early Republican primary states prefer an immigration policy that gives priority to American workers.
The survey polled evangelical voters nationwide on if they were aware of the 2016 presidential candidates talking about whether to cut or increase annual legal immigration and they were then asked their opinion about types of statements being made by potential presidential candidates without mentioning any name or party.
By a 4-1 margin evangelicals strongly supported (rather than strongly opposed") a statement that legal immigration should be cut because the priority for U.S. immigration policy should be to protect American workers and their wages.
Only 24 of evangelicals agreed that our current level of immigration about one million per year should stay the same or be increased. About the same number (25) said annual legal immigration should be cut to zero. Most wanted legal immigration cut by at least half.
When it comes to amnesty only 26 strongly or somewhat supported a priority of offering work permits and citizenship to illegal immigrants currently in the country while 67 strongly or somewhat opposed it. Also by a 12-1 margin evangelical voters said it is more moral for new jobs to go to unemployed Americans and legal immigrants already here than to give illegal immigrants an equal right to compete for the jobs.
Candidates that wish to enlist the support from evangelical voters would be wise to advocate policies that prioritize American workers when it comes to immigration. That means opposing rewarding illegal aliens with work permits so they can compete with U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents for jobs. It also means reordering our legal immigration system to protect the jobs and wages of American workers. Candidates that do not advocate a pro American worker immigration system will find life difficult on the campaign trail.
Ken Blackwell a contributing editor at Townhall.com is a senior fellow at the Family Research Council and the American Civil Rights Union and is on the board of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. He is the co-author of the bestseller The Blueprint: Obamas Plan to Subvert the Constitution and Build an Imperial Presidency on sale in bookstores everywhere..