WASHINGTON (By Devlin Barrett, AP) November 15, 2007 — Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton on Wednesday came out against granting driver's
licenses to undocumented immigrants, after weeks of pressure in the
presidential race to take a position on a now-failed ID plan from
her home state governor.
Clinton has faced criticism from
candidates in both parties for her noncommittal answers on New York
Gov. Eliot Spitzer's attempt to allow undocumented immigrants in his
state to receive driver's licenses. Spitzer abandoned the effort
Wednesday.
"I support Governor Spitzer's decision today to withdraw his
proposal," Clinton said in a statement. "As president, I will not
support driver's licenses for undocumented people and will press for
comprehensive immigration reform that deals with all of the issues
around undocumented immigration including border security and fixing
our broken system."
Clinton stumbled when asked about the issue during a Democratic
debate two weeks ago, and her new position comes the day before
another debate where opponents are expected to raise the issue
again.
Rival campaigns made clear they were not letting go of the issue.
"When it takes two weeks and six different positions to answer
one question on immigration, it's easier to understand why the
Clinton campaign would rather plant their questions than answer
them," said Barack Obama spokesman Bill Burton, referring to the
Clinton campaign's admission that aides had staged a question for
her at an Iowa event.
Colleen Flanagan, a spokesman for Chris Dodd, called Clinton's
position "flip-flopping cubed. She was for it before she was against
it, before she was for it, before she was against it."
Spitzer met with New York lawmakers in Washington on Wednesday,
and conceded that there was too much public opposition to his plan.
Clinton did not attend the meeting.
"It does not take a stethoscope to hear the pulse of New Yorkers
on this topic," he said.
The Democratic governor introduced the plan two months ago with
the goal of increased security, safer roads and an opportunity to
bring immigrants "out of the shadows." Opponents charged the scheme
would make it easier for would-be terrorists to get identification,
and make the country less safe.
The decision is another example of the roadblocks high-profile
immigration reforms have faced this year. Less than five months ago,
Congress failed to pass legislation that would legalize as many as
12 million unlawful immigrants and fortify the border with Mexico.
"The federal government has lost control of its borders... and
now has no solution to deal with it," Spitzer said.
Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff called Spitzer's
reversal on the license issue "a good development" and said
immigration is a federal issue for which his department has to "ramp
up enforcement."
"What I want to make sure is that states aren't working at cross
purposes with us and enabling the kind of conduct we're enforcing
against," Chertoff told The Associated Press by telephone from
London.