Biden Blames
Mexico's Corrupt System for
Drugs
and Illegal Immigration
Hispanic News and the Blue
Dogs of the Democratic Party support sealing the border to
prevent entry of drugs into the United States. Drugs from
Mexico are devastating America's youth and communities.
COLUMBIA, South Carolina (AP) November 28,
2006 — Sen. Joe Biden, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee's incoming
chairman, wants to get tough with Mexico, calling it an "erstwhile
democracy" with a "corrupt system" responsible for illegal immigration and
drug problems in the U.S.
Biden,
D-Delaware, was in Columbia on Monday in his first post election trip to
this first-in-the-South presidential primary state as he continues to line
up support for his presidential bid.
During a question-and-answer session before
more than 230 Columbia Rotary Club members, Biden was asked about
immigration problems.
Biden, who favors tightening the
U.S.-Mexico border with fences, said immigration is driven by money in
low-wage Mexico.
"Mexico is a country that is an erstwhile
democracy where they have the greatest disparity of wealth," Biden said. "It
is one of the wealthiest countries in the hemisphere and because of a
corrupt system that exists in Mexico, there is the 1 percent of the
population at the top, a very small middle class and the rest is abject
poverty."
Unless the political dynamics change in
Mexico and U.S. employers who hire illegal immigrants are punished, illegal
immigration won't stop. "All the rest is window dressing," he said.
An even bigger problem are illegal drugs
"coming up through corrupt Mexico," he said. "People are driving across that
border with tons, tons -- hear me -- tons of everything from byproducts for
methamphetamines, to cocaine, to heroine."
Covering a variety of topics, Biden kept
most of the crowd in their seats for an hour -- twice as long as scheduled.
"I warn all of you, all of you making more
than a million bucks -- I hope you all are -- I'm taking away your tax cut,"
Biden said. "I'm not joking."
The extra revenue would generate $75
billion a year and pay for a backlog in national security and local law
enforcement programs, Biden said.
Biden's appeal for bipartisanship captured
Bruce Rippeteau, a former Rotary president who says he's in the Genghis Khan
wing of the Republican Party.
He "was saying some important things in a
nonpolitical way," Rippeteau said.
"I want to compliment him about what he
didn't say," Wilson said. "He never one time mentioned weapons of mass
destruction."
Biden will lead the Foreign Relations panel
because Republicans around the nation lost seats in the November 7
elections. That tide didn't reach Republican-dominated South Carolina, where
the GOP maintained its four U.S. House seats and Democrats kept their two.
Jon Garrido,
President, The Blue
Dogs of the National
Democratic Party