By Stephen Dinan
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
July 14, 2005
DUBUQUE, Iowa -- Despite his four trips to early primary and caucus states this year, Rep. Tom Tancredo is not running for president -- yet.
But unless he can force what he called "the top-tier candidates, the guys with all the money, all the stature" in the Republican primary to take a strong position on cracking down on illegal immigration and lowering legal immigration, that is exactly what Mr. Tancredo told several audiences in Iowa this past weekend he will do.
"My task is to get one of them to take this on," Mr. Tancredo told about 50 members of the Christian Coalition of Iowa who gathered in a community center in Cedar Falls on Friday night. "If they don't do that, if I cannot find someone to do that, if they just give lip service to it and not the heart, yeah, I will run. I will do that."
The Colorado Republican said the standing ovations he received during his four stops to speak to coalition audiences in Iowa and his reception in other key primary and caucus states like New Hampshire, South Carolina and Georgia are an indication of how important the issue of immigration has become.
To drive the issue, he has started a political action committee, Team America, being run by Angela "Bay" Buchanan, who ran the campaigns of her brother, former presidential candidate Pat Buchanan. Mr. Tancredo does not have a fundraising goal, but he does have a mission: to make immigration the dominant issue for both Republicans and Democrats running for president in 2008.
"I want you to confront the people you talk to," he told about 30 people at a home here Saturday. "Make them answer these questions: How are you going to defend our borders? Will you secure them, even if that means the military? Will you go after employers that are presently making the demand side of this equation go up? And how will you do it?"
He said he thinks 25 percent of Republican primary voters would consider cracking down on illegal immigration a threshold issue. He said none of the prominent candidates is there yet.
"None of them are coming at it from the heart. None of them are coming at it because they really are true to themselves," he said. "Most of them are coming to it because they are hearing [about] it everywhere they go."
He also said the problems with the Republican field go beyond immigration.
"We don't have a very big bench, frankly, on anything, as far as I'm concerned -- a very deep bench on anything. I don't see substance," he said.
The congressman finds himself at odds with the Bush administration on immigration and trade. But he does have one influential group on his side -- dozens of local radio talk-show hosts, who he says beg him to run and to announce on their programs.
The 59-year-old former institute director and schoolteacher is unabashedly politically incorrect in doings things like challenging President Bush's claim that the United States is at war with "terrorism."
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