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23 Jun 2006 A Republican gubernatorial (AZ) candidate's call for creation of a forced labor camp for illegal immigrants drew rebukes Friday from two GOP lawmakers, who labeled it a low point in the immigration debate. The article in EFE, a national news agency of Spain, described Don Goldwater's plan as a "concentration camp" for migrants. (Halliburton's KBR is already on the case! See: KBR awarded $385M Homeland Security contract for U.S. detention centers 24 Jan 2006.) McCain and Kolbe favor a guest-worker program for illegal immigrants.

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  • Immigration-plank-Goldwater of AZ
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  • 23 Jun 2006 A Republican gubernatorial (AZ) candidate's call for creation of a forced labor camp for illegal immigrants drew rebukes Friday from two GOP lawmakers, who labeled it a low point in the immigration debate. The article in EFE, a national news agency of Spain, described Don Goldwater's plan as a "concentration camp" for migrants. (Halliburton's KBR is already on the case! See: KBR awarded $385M Homeland Security contract for U.S. detention centers 24 Jan 2006.) McCain and Kolbe favor a guest-worker program for illegal immigrants.
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  • 23 Jun 2006 A Republican gubernatorial (AZ) candidate's call for creation of a forced labor camp for illegal immigrants drew rebukes Friday from two GOP lawmakers, who labeled it a low point in the immigration debate. The article in EFE, a national news agency of Spain, described Don Goldwater's plan as a "concentration camp" for migrants. (Halliburton's KBR is already on the case! See: KBR awarded $385M Homeland Security contract for U.S. detention centers 24 Jan 2006.) Don Goldwater, nephew of the late Sen. Barry Goldwater, caused an international stir in June, 2006, when EFE, a national news agency of Spain, quoted him as saying he wanted to hold undocumented immigrants in camps to use them "as labor in the construction of a wall and to clean the areas of the Arizona desert that they're polluting." Goldwater, a candidate for governor in Arizona, said in a statement that his comments were taken out of context. He said he was calling for a work program for convicted nonviolent felons, similar to "tried and tested, effective and accepted practices" used by state and local jails. But two Republicans, Arizona Sen. John McCain and Rep. Jim Kolbe, called Goldwater's comments "deeply offensive" and asked state Republicans to reject his candidacy in the Sept. 12 primary. "That Mr. Goldwater is either unaware of or indifferent to the loaded symbolism, injustice and un-Americanism of his 'plan' to address the many serious issues caused by illegal immigration reveals his flaws as a candidate and a stunning lack of respect for the basic values of a generous and decent society," McCain said in a statement. Kolbe said that if the comments are true, Goldwater "has demonstrated his complete unworthiness for public office, and I am confident he will be soundly rejected by Republicans from the party of Barry Goldwater, who consistently demonstrated his compassion and respect for all people. This is a sad day in the national debate on immigration policy." McCain and Kolbe favor a guest-worker program for illegal immigrants. Goldwater made a similar comment at an April anti-immigration rally.
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