Senator John McCain
of
Arizona for President
Fan Club!
Welcome to mccain for president organization un-official
Sen McCain Fan Club!
U.S. Senator John McCain has a long career of dedicated and excellent
public service.
Senator John McCain is running for president in 2008.
After graduating from the US Naval Academy in 1958, John McCain began
his career as a Naval aviator. In 1982, he was elected to Congress
representing what was then the first congressional district of Arizona.
In 1986, he was elected to the United States Senate to take the place
of Arizona's great Senator Barry Goldwater. Senator McCain is currently
the senior senator from Arizona.
In 2000, McCain ran unsuccessfully for the Republican nomination
for President of the United States. He is currently the Chairman
of the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs, and serves on the Armed
Services, and Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committees.
Sentator John McCain is running for predient in 2008.
Senator McCain has seven children and four grandchildren. He and
his wife, Cindy, reside in Phoenix
McCain supporters and followers of the John McCain Fan Club want to know his
position on the immigration reform act of 2006 . . . read the following
for his views and position on this important subject:
MCCAIN STATEMENT ON THE FINAL PASSAGE OF THE COMPREHENSIVE
IMMIGRATION REFORM ACT OF 2006
For Immediate Release - Thursday, May 25, 2006
Washington D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator John McCain
(R-AZ) delivered the following statement on the floor of the U.S.
Senate regarding the final passage of the Comprehensive Immigration
Reform Act of 2006:
Mr. President, after several weeks of extensive debate and consideration
of numerous and complicated amendments, the Senate is about to move
to final passage on S. 2611, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform
Act. This legislation addresses comprehensively one of the most
important and complex issues facing our country. Our nation’s
immigration system is broken. I don’t think there was one
member of the United States Senate to argue that fact. Without enactment
of comprehensive immigration reform as provided for under this bill,
our nation’s security will remain vulnerable. That is why
we must pass this bill, and reach a meaningful final product through
conference deliberations. Our failure to produce a final comprehensive
measure is an unacceptable proposition.
I want to first thank the President for his leadership on this
issue. The President's speech to the Nation last week, which I thought
was inspired, was greeted by 74 percent of the American people overnight
favorably, including his absolute determination to see the Congress
of the United States send him a bill which has a comprehensive approach
to this issue which we as a Congress and a Federal Government have
ignored for too long.
I also commend the Senate Leadership on both sides of the aisle
for their efforts to ensure that the Senate addressed this important
issue and gave us more than adequate time for a thorough debate.
This is a proud moment for the United States Senate, as we have
conducted good work and returned to orderly traditions of the legislative
process as envisioned by our founding fathers.
I also want to again recognize Chairman Specter for his work in
leading us to this point in the legislative process. He and all
of the members of the Judiciary Committee deserve our appreciation
for the considerable effort they have taken on this issue during
this Congress.
And of course, I commend Senator Kennedy, who is perhaps the leading
expert on this difficult issue. He and I spent many months working
to develop a comprehensive, reasonable, workable legislative proposal,
much of which is contained in the bill before us. I also want to
thank Senators Brownback, Lieberman, Graham, Salazar, Martinez,
Obama, and Dewine for their shared commitment to this issue, and
working to ensure this bill moved successfully intact through the
legislative process.
Mr. President, throughout this debate, we were reminded that immigration
is a national security issue, and it is. It is also a matter of
life and death for many living along the border. We have hundreds
of people flowing across our borders every day, coming here only
in search of better lives for themselves and their families. They
come to fill the vacant jobs at businesses and farms that struggle
with real labor shortages that impact negatively our economy.
This Nation is calling for our borders to be secured and for an
overhaul of our immigration system, and that it be done in a humane
and comprehensive fashion. Vote after vote after vote taken in this
body reaffirms that fact.
The new policies as provided for under this legislation will increase
border security and provide for a new, temporary worker program
to enable foreign workers to work legally in this country when there
are jobs that American workers won’t fill. And, it will acknowledge
and address in a humanitarian and compassionate way the current
undocumented population
As many have noted, Mr. President, there are over 11 million people
in America today who came here illegally. They live in our cities
and towns and rural communities. They harvest our crops, tend our
gardens, work in our restaurants and clean our houses. They came,
as others before them came, to grasp the lowest rung of the American
ladder of opportunity, to work the jobs others won’t, and
by virtue of their own industry and dreams, to rise and build better
lives for their families and a better America.
Some Americans believe we must find all these millions, round them
up and send them back to the countries they came from. I don’t
know how you do that. And I don’t know why you would want
to.
Yes, in this post 9/11 era, America must enforce its borders. There
are people who wish to come here to do us harm, and we must vigilantly
guard against them, spend whatever it takes, devote as much manpower
to the task as necessary. But we must also find some way to separate
those who have come here for the same reasons every immigrant has
come here from those who are driven here by their hate for us and
our ideals. We must concentrate our resources on the latter and
persuade the former to come out from the shadows. We won’t
be able to persuade them if all we offer is a guarded escort back
to the place of hopelessness and injustice that they had fled.
Why not say to those undocumented workers who are working the jobs
that the rest of us refuse, come out from the shadows, earn your
citizenship in this country. You broke the law to come here, so
you must go to the back of the line, pay a fine, stay employed,
learn our language, pay your taxes, obey our laws, and earn the
right to be an American.
Riayen Tejada immigrated to New York from the Dominican Republic.
He came with two dreams, he said, to become an American citizen
and to serve in the United States Marine Corps. He willingly accepted
the obligations of American citizenship before he possessed all
the rights of an American. Staff Sergeant Tejada, from Washington
Heights by way of the Dominican Republic, the father of two young
daughters, died in an ambush in Baghdad on May 14, 2004. He had
never fulfilled his first dream to become a naturalized American
citizen. But he loved this country so much that he gave his life
to defend her. Right now, at this very moment, there are fighting
for us in Iraq and Afghanistan, soldiers whose parents are not yet
American citizens but who have dreamed the dream that their sons
and daughters risk their lives to defend. They should make us proud
to be Americans.
These people have come for the same reason immigrants have always
come to America. They came to grasp the lowest rung of the ladder,
and they intend to rise. Let them rise. Let them rise. We will be
better for it. For America– blessed, bountiful, beautiful
America – is still the land of hope and opportunity –
the land of the immigrant’s dreams. Long may she remain so.
Please note according to Danny Sullivan's "Search Engine Watch" web site (article titled Can You Find Your Canditate) McCainForPresident.org was previously owned by Senator McCain prior to the Year 2000 Election Campaign. About the year 2000 John apparently decided to not renew this domain name) which was later purchased by someone else and acquired by us (we are also Arizona residents and a fan of Sen McCain) in 2003. He gave up using mccainforpresident organization in favor of a site which used both his name combined with the election year (McCain2000.com). This is a quote courtesy of searchenginewatch.com: "...McCain shows more sophistication. He formerly operated a site at mccainforpresident.org before moving to the mccain2000.com domain." Please note for the Year 2008 Presidential Election Sen McCain is using JohnMcCain.com for his 2008 Presidential Bid and political fund raising.