Tancredo targets Republicans on immigration
M.E. Sprengelmeyer, Rocky Mountain News
Published June 6, 2007 at midnight
Rep. Tom Tancredo plans to change direction in his long-shot presidential campaign so he can pressure fellow Republicans into rejecting an immigration reform plan he considers "amnesty."
Before a Tuesday night debate on CNN, Tancredo, R-Colo., told reporters he soon plans to scale back his weekly visits to the early caucus and primary states of -Iowa and New Hampshire.
Tancredo said he would spend more time traveling to Republican-held congressional districts around the country. There, he hopes to pressure GOP incumbents in their own backyards, threatening to work for their defeats unless they help block the immigration reform bill now pending in the Senate.
"This is the whole ballgame here to a large extent," Tancredo said.
On Tuesday he launched a "Save America" campaign to oppose the immigration bill because he says it would "destroy our great nation" and open the floodgates to even more illegal immigration.
"We're going to continue to campaign, but I cannot devote as much time to the two states that we were focusing on," Tancredo said. "We'll still be there, but I can't do it as much because this bill has to be stopped, and it is immediate. This is for the country. "
Targeting fellow Republicans is nothing new for Tancredo. Team America, a political action committee he founded, aggressively targeted Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, in last year's GOP primary. Cannon eventually won re-election.
The committee also tried to influence races in California, Arizona and elsewhere. Cannon spokesman Fred Piccolo said Tancredo's efforts didn't work in 2006.
"If his poll numbers are any indication, then he's not catching fire with the Republican base on an issue that's front and center," Piccolo said.
Tancredo has been polling below the margin of error in polls around the country.
This week, the Senate is debating a bipartisan bill that could grant legal status to millions of people who are in the country illegally. If approved, it then would go to the House of Representatives, where opponents of the White House-backed plan hope to make a last stand.
Backers, including Republican presidential contender Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., say the legislation is a realistic way of dealing with the more than 12 million illegal immigrants estimated to be in the country. The legislation also includes border security and enforcement provisions.
Fighting illegal immigration and the White House-backed legislation has been the centerpiece of Tancredo's uphill presidential campaign. He has focused heavily on the early states of Iowa and New Hampshire in hopes of gaining momentum to win in later primaries.
"We haven't changed any plans we already have for Iowa and New Hampshire," said spokesman Alan Moore. "The whole focus of him traveling is to stop this bill. He's going to go wherever he's needed to make the best case to kill this."
sprengelmeyerm@shns.com or 515-244-2396. Columnist Mike Littwin contributed to this report.
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