| Tom Joyner: Good evening. I'm Tom Joyner. And I'd
like to welcome you to the 2007 Republican "All-American
Presidential Forum" at historically Black Morgan
State University.
This event is brought to you by PBS and my dear
friend and colleague, Tavis Smiley.
I'm excited to be here, but I admit I'm a little
bit out of my comfort zone. I kind of feeling like
Dan Rather at CBS premiere week.
But we're all here for a very positive reason,
and I salute each of you for participating in this
evening's event, including all of you here in the
audience.
We may not agree on all the issues, but we do agree
on the importance of an evening like this, and you
demonstrate that sentiment with your presence.
And to the esteemed candidates, whether you're
pro-life or pro- choice, for the war in Iraq or
against it, for Kanye West or 50 Cent, it's your
turn to share your message with an audience that's
stretched further than it's ever been stretched
before, and that's a good thing.
Is Dr. Richardson in the house? Dr. Earl Richardson,
president of Morgan State University.
And let me take a moment right here and now to
say hello to those of you viewing from home. Mayor
Rudy Giuliani. Senator John McCain. Governor Mitt
Romney. And Senator Fred Thompson. Well, you know,
I had to call them out.
Also, while I'm doing shout-outs to those who might
be viewing at home, a special shout-out this evening
to Mychal Bell and his family in Jena, Louisiana.
Mychal Bell is out of jail and at home, after 10
months in jail for what amounted to a high school
brawl. It all started because Black kids couldn't
sit under a white-only tree in Jena, Louisiana.
The "Tom Joyner Morning Show" has more
than 8 million African American listeners, and there
is a perception out there that the Republican Party
holds only the interests of the majority population.
That is a perception many Republicans say is unfounded.
In fact, there is a large audience of Black Republicans
here tonight that will swear that this is not true.
Well, this evening is a rare opportunity for Republican
candidates to address the concerns and the interests
of people of color. I can only assume that Republican
candidates who hope to become the president of all
the people are here tonight.
Fifty years ago, in Little Rock, Arkansas, the
glare of hatred and racism shone on what became
"the Little Rock 9." Fifty years later,
that ugly light shines just as bright in Jena, Louisiana.
We've got a lot of work to do and it's going to
take a special kind of unity, tolerance and understanding
to get it done.
But nothing will be accomplished until we open
our eyes to what still divides us in the first place.
Pretending that racism does not exist only assures
us that we'll be revisiting the same issues another
50 years from now, another five months from now,
maybe another five minutes from now.
This evening is a step in the right direction,
and I'm proud to be a part of it.
So let's loosen up, everybody. You don't have to
wave your arms in the air, but at least unfold them.
And since I called out the candidates who chose
not to join us here tonight, let's give it up for
those who are here.
And now, please welcome, my friend and moderator
of the "All- American Presidential Forum,"
Tavis Smiley.
Tavis Smiley: To my dear and abiding friend Tom
Joyner, first of all, thank you.
Let me commence tonight by thanking Morgan State
University and Dr. Richardson for hosting us and
my network home, PBS, for broadcasting this "All-American
Presidential Forum."
We live now in the most multi-cultural, multi-racial
and multi- ethnic America ever.
Public broadcasting, then, I think, at its best,
celebrates that reality.
It is our hope tonight that, as you watch this
"All-American Presidential Forum on PBS,"
or listen on Public Radio International, you'll
come to appreciate that, as Americans, we all want
the same thing: to live in a nation as good as its
promise.
And so we're here tonight because of "The
Covenant with Black America," a book that details
the most pressing issues of concern to black America,
and what everyday black people can do to create
change.
Princeton professor, Dr. Cornell West, offers us,
in that book, "The Covenant," a powerful
formulation on leadership. Says Dr. West, "You
can't lead the people if you don't love the people.
And you can't save the people, if you don't serve
the people."
And so tonight we ask of these Republican candidates:
What's the depth of your love for everyday people
and what will be the quality of your service to
them?
And speaking of love and service, earlier this
week, I was in Little Rock, Arkansas, to celebrate
the 50th anniversary of the integration of Central
High School, following the historic Brown v. Board
of Education decision.
And tonight we are honored to have with us two
authentic American heroes.
Please welcome two of the "Little Rock 9:"
Dr. Terrence Roberts and Jefferson Thomas.
Thank you both for being here. It is our honor.
We are blessed to have you in this house this evening.
Finally, some of the campaigns who declined our
invitation to join us tonight have suggested publicly
that this audience would be hostile and unreceptive.
Since we're live on PBS right now, I can't tell
you what I really think of these kinds of comments.
But, that said, we're going to be meeting the six
candidates who are here tonight. I know you'll join
me in showing them your utmost respect.
Fortunately, there are those in the Republican
Party who do understand the importance of reaching
out to people of color.
I am grateful to former RNC Chairman Ken Mehlman,
former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, former Congressman
Jack Kemp and former Maryland Lieutenant Governor
Michael Steele, all of whom have lent their support
over the last year to this event.
Indeed, last week, President Bush was asked about
those GOP candidates not attending tonight, and
responded by underscoring the importance of reaching
out to communities of color.
We believe that when we make communities of color
better, we make our country better. And so enough
said about the no-shows.
Here now to introduce the candidates who are here.
Please welcome the former Maryland lieutenant governor
and current chairman of GOPAC, Michael Steele.
Former Maryland Lieutenant Governor Michael Steele:
Thank you. Thank you. Thank you very much. Thank
you. Thank you guys very much.
The value of participation in the public life of
your community is immeasurable. Each of us has a
duty to be engaged in the public debate of ideas,
and that's what draws us here this evening.
Good evening and welcome to the campus of Morgan
State University for this "American Presidential
Forum on PBS."
As we gather this evening, we do so in the shadow
of the nine black students who entered Little Rock
high school 50 years ago, under watchful protection
of Republican President Dwight Eisenhower, who made
clear to a weary nation that segregation was not
compatible with the ideals of America.
Together, the "Little Rock 9" and President
Eisenhower changed the course of a nation.
But since that time, the Republican Party and the
Black community have stood at arm's length from
each other. Republicans assuming Blacks will never
vote for us mentality, and Blacks ignoring real
solutions to very serious problems facing their
families and communities solely because those solutions
have a Republican label. Very often, both have missed
genuine opportunities to communicate and reach out
to each other.
But not tonight. Tonight, African Americans and
Republicans take hold of their political destinies,
and come together in a renewed spirit as we welcome
the Republican candidates for president.
Once again, we have an opportunity to change th
e course of a nation.
So I'm proud to introduce to you former Arkansas
Governor Mike Huckabee. Texas Congressman Ron Paul.
Kansas Senator Sam Brownback. Colorado Congressman
Tom Tancredo. California Congressman Duncan Hunter.
Former Ambassador Alan Keyes.
Tavis: The podium order was determined by a random
drawing that included all 10 announced GOP candidates.
Those candidates not here tonight are represented
by an empty podium. Each candidate will have one
minute to answer all questions until we get a little
short on time later, and then we'll use moderator's
prerogative to advance the conversation.
Before we get to the first question tonight, from
our radio contest winner at BlackAmericaWeb.com,
let me throw this out to each of you candidates
who are here tonight, starting with you, Governor
Mike Huckabee.
Please tell me and this audience, in your own words,
why you chose to be here tonight and what you say
to those who chose not to be here tonight.
Former Gov. Mike Huckabee: Well, Tavis, I want
to be president of the United States, not just president
of the Republican Party. Frankly, I'm embarrassed.
I'm embarrassed for our party and I'm embarrassed
for those who did not come, because there's long
been a divide in this country, and it doesn't get
better when we don't show up.
Quite frankly, for a lot of people. there's a perception
that Black Americans don't vote for Republicans.
I proved that wrong in Arkansas, with 48 percent
of African Americans voting for me.
But I want to make sure that the people of this
country recognize that we've come a long way, but
we have a long way to go. And we don't get there
if we don't sit down and work through issues that
are still very deep in this country, when it comes
to racial divide.
I'm honored to be here. I appreciate you having
us. I wish all of the candidates had come. But tonight
we hopefully will make up their time and make up
their ground.
Tavis: Thank you. Congressman Paul?
Rep. Ron Paul: Well, the main reason I'm here is
because I was invited. And I'm delighted that I
was invited. And I'm very pleased, because I go
wherever I'm invited to talk about freedom. That,
to me, is the most important thing, along with the
emphasis on the Constitution.
I believe so strongly that individuals have their
rights and their life as a gift from God, and the
purpose of government is to protect life and liberty.
But I'd also like to extend that. If you have the
fruits of your labor, I would like you to keep the
fruits of your labor as well.
And under those conditions and under a freedom
philosophy and under the Constitution, we would
be so much more prosperous, because we wouldn't
be policing the world, we would be bringing our
troops home, and we would take care of our people
here at home.
Tavis: Thank you, Congressman. Senator Brownback.
Sen. Sam Brownback: Thank you very much for having
us here.
I want to say just at the outset, I apologize for
the candidates that aren't here. I think this is
a disgrace that they're not here.
I think it's a disgrace for our country, I think
it's bad for our party, and I don't think it's good
for our future.
You know, you grow political parties by expanding
your base, by reaching out to people and getting
more people. What they're doing is sending the message
of narrowing the base, and that's not the right
way to go. It's not good for the Republican Party,
it's not good for the country. And I'm sorry. I'm
sorry to you and I'm sorry to those watching that
they're not here.
I've got a suggestion, though, for a way to fix
it. A lot of people on the Republican side say:
Well, OK, we can't get votes in the African American
community. I say: Why don't you pick one of the
early primary states, like a South Carolina or a
Michigan, register Republican, and vote for one
of the six of us?
And then let's see what takes place.
Tavis: Senator Brownback, thank you very much.
Congressman Tancredo?
Rep. Tom Tancredo: Thank you, Tavis. I am here
likewise because I was asked and because I made
a commitment on your show. I must admit to you that
it is pleasurable and a little bit different to
be in this kind of an environment with my colleagues
who are here because the last time I was at an event
of this nature, it was the NAACP convention and
I was the only Republican that showed up.
So I am glad that my colleagues have joined me
on the stage tonight.
And I am especially glad to be here to be able
to talk about something that was mentioned during
the original introduction, something you said, I
believe, Tavis, when you talked about -- we're here
to talk about the promise of America.
And that is what drives me, that's -- I think,
probably all of my colleagues up here. That is exactly
why we can get up, do the next event, go get on
the plane, do the next event. It is because the
promise of America is something that we all have
to actually share in, and we have to explain to
everybody that's listening to us how we would fulfill
that, what would we do for that promise of America
-- to every single person in this room and for every
person listening on the radio and television tonight.
Tavis: Thank you, sir.
Tancredo: So, certainly, that's why I am here to
do so.
Tavis: Thank you. Congressman Hunter?
Rep. Duncan Hunter: Thank you, Tavis.
You know, when we have family reunions and some
of the family members don't show up, we do talk
about them.
But I'm not going to do that.
You know, tonight we have about 160,000 Americans
in Iraq -- in a war. We have over 20,000 of our
uniform personnel in Afghanistan. And I'm going
to talk, tonight, about how we leave Iraq in victory.
We have a border and we've got a big piece of this
border, obviously, shown right behind us here. We
have a border which is on fire with massive amounts
of narcotics and people being smuggled across, illegally,
as we stand here. I want to talk about that.
But you know, most importantly, I want to do what
my little grandson did when he walked up to his
first grade teacher about a month ago, stuck his
hand out, said, "My name is Duncan Hunter."
We call him "D-3."
And he said, "My grandpa's going to be president."
And then this little 6-year-old looked his teacher
right in the eye and he said, "Now, can I count
on your vote?"
I'm coming here for your vote.
Tavis: Congressman, thank you. Ambassador Keyes?
Former Ambassador Alan Keyes: Now, I wouldn't want
to seem to be the fellow who's going to speak up
in defense of our absent colleagues here.
But I think it is a little unfair to assume that
they didn't show up tonight because they were sending
a message of some negative kind to the Black community,
for the very obvious reason that they didn't show
up at the Values Voters Debate, either -- which,
of course, sent a very negative message to the people
who are interested in the issues that were discussed
there.
Do you know what these two debates do have in common
though? The Values Voters Debate was the first debate
I was included in. And this is the second debate
I'm included in.
I've been barred from the debate in Michigan, for
reasons best known to the party there. And what
do you want to make of that? The other guys will
show up there.
Now, that suggests that they may or may not be
afraid of all Black people, but there seems to be
at least one Black person they're afraid of.
And I think the reason -- the reason that they
have this fear is pretty evident. They don't believe
that it's possible to address a significant portion
of the Black community...
Tavis: Mr. Ambassador?
Keyes: ... on the basis of solid Republican principles,
and I do.
Tavis: Mr. Ambassador, thank you very much for
being here.
Let me now introduce, to get this conversation
really started, Lucille Victoria Rowels of Chicago,
winner of our online contest in which we asked listeners
of the "Tom Joyner Morning Show" to submit
their questions to the Web site.
Lucille, please welcome her.
Lucille Victoria Rowels: Even though a majority
of individuals who have served as president since
Abraham Lincoln have been Republican, I believe
that most Black Americans who will vote in the year
2008 are not able to name even one Republican president
in the 142 years since Lincoln's death who have
left a positive and significant legacy for Black
Americans.
If you are elected president in 2008, what positive
and significant legacy, if any, will you leave for
Black Americans?
Tavis: Governor Huckabee?
Huckabee: Well, I would say, first of all, that
I would hope they would name President Eisenhower.
Because he sent those troops and federalized the
National Guard in Little Rock, Arkansas in 1957,
when it was a Democrat governor who stood at the
schoolhouse door and said those young people couldn't
come in.
And I would like to believe, if I were fortunate
enough to be the president, that at the end of my
tenure -- hopefully, eight years, by the way, not
just four -- that housing opportunities would be
better, that we made some real strides in the criminal
justice system so that you don't have a different
sentence for a 17-year-old kid caught with a lid
of marijuana than you do some upper-middle-class
white kid who gets caught with cocaine. He goes
to rehab, and the Black kid goes to prison for 10
years.
We'd change that. We'd have a different system
as it relates to such things as health care, because
there is a disproportionate level of people in the
African American community with hypertension, with
stroke, with diabetes. And there needs to be a disproportionate
level of funding to help them.
Those are the kind of things that could make a
difference and end this divide that we have.
Tavis: Governor, thank you. Congressman Paul?
Paul: I would like to believe that if we had a
freer society, it would take care of Blacks and
whites and everybody equally because we're all individuals.
To me, that is so important. But if we had equal
justice under the law, I think it would be a big
improvement. If we had probably a repeal of most
of the federal laws on drugs and the unfairness
on how Blacks are treated with these drugs laws,
it would be a tremendous improvement.
And also, I think that if you're going to have
prosperity, it serves everybody. And if this is
done by emphasizing property rights and freedom
of the individuals, making sure that the powerful
special interests don't control Washington, that
the military industrial complex doesn't suck away
all the wealth of the country, and then we would
have prosperity.
This is what we need and we need to share it. The
free society is the only society that can provide
goods and services and distribute them in the most
fair manner. And that is the society that I would
advocate and argue for and believe it's available
to us.
Tavis: Thank you, sir. Senator Brownback?
Brownback: Lucille, it's a great question. It's
one we should ponder and ponder seriously. There
are several things that I would do. One is focusing
in on rebuilding the family, and that's been at
the core of my campaign -- is rebuilding the family.
We pushed that in Washington D.C. where I chaired
the committee and developed marriage -- development
accounts, and really urging that.
The second one is I think symbols are important,
and I would hope I would be the president that would
open the National African American Museum of History
and Culture on the Mall in Washington, D.C.
I pushed for that. We've gotten the funding on
it. And that symbolism would be important to do.
And the final thing that I think is critical that
we do. I think we need to have -- and we need to
pass in the Congress, and the president sign it
and say it, an official apology from the U.S. government
for the institutions of slavery and segregation
in this country. I think that needs to be done.
Tavis: Senator, thank you. Congressman Tancredo?
Tancredo: Thank you.
First of all, I do believe that there are a number
of Republican presidents who have done a great deal
for Black Americans, because they've done something
for all Americans.
Ronald Reagan, from my point of view, did something
for every single American by increasing individual
liberty.
You know, it is, I think, destructive to only talk
about the politics of race, and suggest that all
of the actions taken, or all of the specific programs
that we identify and talk about tonight should be
focused on race.
It really does not do a service, I think, to us
as Americans and again, that promise to America.
And I'll tell you this, one of the things that I
will do as president of the United States, to increase
the economic opportunities for every American, especially
people in the lower economic rung of the ladder
in America, is to reduce the flow of illegal immigration
into this country, which depresses wage rates for
the lowest-income earners in this country.
And it's got to be dealt with. It's got to be dealt
with forcefully. And I tell you, yes, Black America,
brown America, white America, all will be enhanced
by actually enforcing our laws.
Tavis: Congressman Hunter?
Hunter: Thank you, Tavis.
What a wonderful question. And, you know, I think
that we also have to add, with Governor Huckabee's
statement about Ike, that calm hand of Dwight Eisenhower
that brought about desegregation -- also, you know,
in 1964, that Civil Rights Act was passed with a
greater proportion of Republican votes in the United
States Congress than Democrat votes, a fact that's
been forgotten over the years. I want you to remember
that.
But, you know, I can't talk about young Black Americans,
the need for them to be shielded from pornography,
which is certainly a need, without talking about
the need for all Americans to be shielded from pornography.
And in the barrio where I practiced law before
I ran for Congress and got this job, I remember
Mr. Sanchez down the street with his family, working
18-hour days, a need to have less regulation, less
taxation. That would help all Americans.
And I guess I would go with Jack Kemp's great statement:
A rising tide lifts all boats. A Republican administration,
my administration, would lift all boats.
Tavis: Congressman, thank you. Ambassador Keyes.
Keyes: I would hope that the most important legacy
of my administration would be to remind people that
in spite of all the talk, I don't believe there
is this deep divide between Blacks and whites in
America.
I believe that we are, in fact, part of one nation
and one community, and that we stand together right
now in danger of our rights, because the core of
that community is not race; the core of that community
is not money. The core of that community is the
moral consensus that we are all created equal and
endowed by our creator, God, with our unalienable
rights that we have the right in our policies and
in our laws to honor and respect the creator, God.
And as a practical matter, I would want to see
that unity, that moral understanding restored where
it is most important -- in the education of our
young by adopting an approach to education that
empowers every parent in this country to send their
children to schools that reflect their faith and
values...
Tavis: Ambassador...
Keyes: ... so that the Black community can re-instill
moral, community-based schools that reflect...
Tavis: I appreciate it. Lucille, thank you very
much.
Let me now turn this conversation over to a terrific
and very able panel of journalists who will take
us the rest of the way.
First up, Cynthia Tucker, editorial page editor
for the "Atlanta Journal Constitution"
and a recipient this year of the Pulitzer Prize
for Commentary. Please welcome Cynthia Tucker.
Up next, Ray Suarez, well known to PBS viewers
for his work on "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer."
Please welcome Ray Suarez.
And Juan Williams of NPR and a contributor to FOX
News channel. Please welcome Juan Williams.
Tavis: Ms. Tucker will start the conversation.
Governor Huckabee will answer first. And then we
will move down the line giving every candidate the
chance to answer the next question first.
Cynthia Tucker for Governor Huckabee.
Cynthia Tucker: Governor, I want to ask about race
and unemployment.
In 2006, the unemployment rate of Black high school
graduates -- that's high school graduates -- was
33 percent higher than the unemployment rate for
white high school drop outs. What do you think accounts
for that inequity?
Huckabee: Cynthia, part of that is it is that there
is still racism in this country, and the opportunities
aren't the same. Some of it has to do with the fact
that there are people who unfortunately still look
at a person's face and their skin, and that's something
that government can't change, but leadership certainly
can speak to.
One of the things all of us need to be aware of
is that there isn't an equal opportunity for every
American yet. There just isn't. We could say there
is, but it's not true.
And in some cases, it's because those who try to
lift themselves up find that they get most importantly
the heel of someone's boot on top of their head
every time they try to raise their head.
And the reason answer is to make sure that there
are not only educational opportunities that bring
equality, employment opportunities that ensure that
people have the same chances as anybody else.
Tavis: Governor, thank you. Congressman Paul?
Paul: Walter Williams, a very astute free-market
economist, has studied this extensively, and he
has found that prior to minimum wage laws there
was no discrepancy like this. So he put a lot of
blame on the minimum wage law. Once government gets
interfering, this takes away opportunities. And
I believe there is a lot of truth to this because
it eliminates an opportunity and a chance for a
marginal worker.
So once again, though, the economy is supported
only when you have a sound economy perpetuated by
a government with sound policies. You have to have
sound money. You have to have minimum taxes. You
have to have, you know, a wise foreign policy.
But I have a bill in that might help a lot of people,
Black or white or whomever. I have a bill in that
would immediately help these people who are trying
to get a start, that they would never have to pay
any taxes or payroll taxes, if they just happen
to be a waiter or a waitress, to give them a chance
to get ahead and get a good job.
Tavis: Congressman, thank you, sir. Senator Brownback?
Brownback: I think there's a couple of things --
I think there's a couple of things that are at work
here. One is, I think clearly, we still don't have
a colorblind society. And we're seeing that. We
continue to see it.
I think we've made some great progress. I've worked
with Congressman John Lewis on a number of projects,
worked with him on this museum that I just spoke
about tonight. That museum is going to happen, and
we worked together.
But there is still racism that does exist in America.
There is a second issue here that I think we need
to address, and it's the growth of the economy,
particularly where people are located.
I come from a rural state of Kansas. And I've got
places in my state where there's economic growth
taking place, and I have places where it's not.
And what you have to do to try to stimulate it
is really have a tax policy, something I've talked
about, about an optional flat tax, and maybe you
put it in places where they need the economic growth
to take place more than in other places. So you
stimulate the growth of the economy where people
are needing the most opportunities to grow.
And that's something I would do and work on. And
I think it is part of the issue.
Tavis: Congressman Tancredo?
Tancredo: OK, I just cannot agree with this race-baiting
kind of comments about the reason why we have these
problems.
My friends, I'll tell you that I believe, with
all my heart -- look, why was it that in the '50s,
in the '40s, and actually leading up into the early
'60s, the ability for Blacks in the United States
to improve themselves economically was working?
They were moving up the ladder.
Families were in tact -- in better shape, by the
way, than most white families of that same period
of time. What happened? Two things have happened
to -- I believe -- to devastate the Black community
when it comes to economic opportunity.
One, the welfare state; it began to pay people
to not be in the home.
And when that happened, what we saw is a decline
in wage rates.
And two, of course, is the importation of millions
upon millions of low-income workers that depress
the wage rates for the lowest income among us. Those
two things are responsible, and it's got nothing
to do with race.
Tavis: Congressman Hunter?
Hunter: Thank you.
You know, Republicans, when we had that great match
up of a Republican majority in Congress in the '90s
and President Bill Clinton, the Republicans initiated
legislation three times to reform welfare.
The first two times, President Clinton vetoed it,
and the third time he signed it and took credit
for it. It's something I've done every now and then
in my career.
When we did that, let me tell you what happened.
The number of jobs of single moms, the employment
rate went up. Families did much better. You had
the average income go up in the communities where
the welfare reform took place. You had, according
to HHS, 32 percent increase in employment in those
jobs and in those families which previously were
on welfare. We did very, very well by breaking this
cycle of welfare.
But lastly, there is one party that is very important
to jobs, jobs in the community for everybody.
Tavis: Congressman Hunter?
Hunter: That's the small businessman. If we help
the small businessman, and that's a Republican trademark,
we'll do it...
Tavis: Thank you, sir, very much. Ambassador Keyes?
Keyes: I have to say I think the most important
factor in all of this does have something to do
with policies that had an impact on race, but it
was the disproportionately destructive impact that
a lot of government programs had on the moral foundations
and family structure in the Black community.
You talk about folks finding job opportunities.
You know where a lot of Black men find job opportunities
these days? In prison.
And that is something that reflects the reality
that when you allow the family to break down, when
you have government regulations that drive the father
from the home, you have established the conditions
for the upbringing of children to be nonproductive,
to be violent, to be turned in directions that will
be destructive of their economic future.
And when you add to that the promotion of a culture
of promiscuity, a culture of selfish hedonism, that
leads people not to understand that that marriage
partnership is the most important foundation of
any real economic life, then you have especially
destroyed the Black community.
And I believe the disproportionate impact of these
negative things...
Tavis: Ambassador Keyes, thank you sir.
Keyes: ... has accounted for a lot of these bad
results.
Tavis: Ambassador Keyes, thank you. Ray Suarez
will get the next question now. Congressman Paul
will answer first.
Ray Suarez: Congressman Paul, the most commonly
cited statistic for the number of illegal immigrants
living in the United States is 12 million people.
Is it desirable, is it even practical to try to
send them all home?
If the next Congress passes comprehensive immigration
reform that includes a path to citizenship, will
you sign it, or will you support sending the 12
million home?
Paul: I'm very sorry, but I didn't hear your last
sentence, because of the acoustics.
Suarez: In the next Congress, if the next Congress
passes immigration reform that includes a path to
citizenship, will you sign it, or will you support
sending the 12 million home?
Paul: I would not sign a bill like you describe,
because it would be construed -- and it would be
amnesty, and I haven't supported amnesty.
I also think that it's pretty impractical to get
an army in this country to round up 12 or maybe
20 million. But I do believe that we have to stick
to our guns on obeying the law, and anybody who
comes in here illegally shouldn't be rewarded. And
that would be the case.
But I see the immigration problem as a consequence
of our welfare state. Welfare because we encourage
people not to work here, but the welfare we offer
the people who come -- they get free medical care.
They get free education. They bankrupt our hospitals.
Our hospitals are closing. And it shouldn't be rewarded.
That means that if you don't round them up, you
don't reward them, you don't give them citizenship.
At the same time, you can't solve this problem until
you have -- you get rid of the welfare state, because
in a healthy economy, immigrants wouldn't be a threat
to us. There would probably be a desire for more,
because we would be starved for workers.
But today, they have become scapegoated because
of the weak economy and the lowering of our standard
of living.
Tavis: Congressman, thank you, sir. Senator Brownback?
Brownback: Thanks. Thanks, Ray, for the tough question.
The American people are for immigration. They don't
support illegal immigration. That's what they want
to see take place. They want a legal system. They're
for legal immigration; they're not for illegal immigration.
We've been through this debate now for a couple
of years. They want to see us secure the border,
and that's something I will push and do and have
voted for and will in the future.
They want to see us have enforcement at the worksite.
And that's something that I will do and push and
enforce as well, because that's the key attraction
-- not the only one, but it's the key attraction
-- at the worksite.
I will not support new paths to citizenship. I
do think in the future we should look at different
work-visa-type programs as a way to be able to deal
with the problem that you're identifying, which
is the realistic problem of where we are today.
Tavis: Congressman Tancredo?
Tancredo: Twelve million to 20 million people in
this country illegally. Then that is the ultimate
question, is: What do we do about that situation
today, because we can all rave about how we're going
to secure the borders -- which I'm glad to hear,
by the way, these newfound positions with regard
to the borders and security?
Great. Happy they're there.
But you're right, what are the -- the real issue
is: What do we do about the people here? And I will
tell you, when you use phrases like "rounding
them up," I mean, it -- those are -- they are
improperly used in this respect. Because we're not
talking about rounding people up.
If you, in fact, simply enforce the law -- I know
that's a scary topic sometimes and a controversial
attitude to take -- but enforcing the law, especially
against hiring people who are here illegally, you
will see people returning home, voluntarily.
It's happening today in states all over this nation.
That's exactly the key to this. You do not have
to round people up. You simply have to enforce the
law.
Tavis: Thank you. Congressman Hunter?
Hunter: Thank you.
Tavis, thank you.
Thank you, Ray.
Folks that are here illegally have to leave and
let me tell you why. Today, if you're a dry wall
contractor and you play by the rules and you pay
$27 a loaded hour for each of your employees, you
will be constantly under-cut by contractors who
use people who are here illegally.
That's not fair to Americans who play by the rules.
And we just talked jobs a few minutes ago. That's
one reason you have, in certain areas, especially
in the construction trades now, higher levels of
unemployment.
You have to build a border fence and you've got
to have a real border, not just for immigration
issues, but also because of security issues.
And right now, I wrote the law that extends that
border fence 854 miles across Arizona, New Mexico,
Texas, and California. We need to build the border
fence. It's the law.
And when people come to this country, they've got
to knock on the front door, because the back door's
going to be closed.
Tavis: Ambassador Keyes?
Keyes: Well, I think, especially in this context,
it's important to remember a number of things. The
border is a matter of security, first of all. And
we have to make sure that we control it, or no laws
we pass have any significance. People will still
cross on their own terms.
So the very first priority has to be to get back
control. But we also have to remember why we lost
control, because these elites who have been under
the thumb of certain corporate interests have an
interest in cheapening the price of labor in America.
Do you want to know who's first hurt by that cheapened
price of labor?
Black folks are first hurt, as they've been hurt
in the rebuilding of New Orleans, in the rebuilding
of other parts of the United States that were affected
by those hurricanes. It's time we stopped fooling
around with this issue.
I think people, including a lot of the Black liberals,
are more worried about what we do with illegal immigrants
than they've ever been about the impact of illegal
immigration on Black Americans who have been in
this country all along. I'm sick of seeing it.
Tavis: Governor Huckabee?
Huckabee: I don't believe the average American
resents that people want to come here. I've said
oftentimes we ought to get on our knees every night
and thank God that we still live in a country that
people are trying to break into, not one they're
trying to break out of.
But securing the border is something I think every
one of us agree on. You've got to have a secure
border because otherwise our borders are not only
open to illegal immigrants, but to somebody bringing
a suitcase with a dirty bomb.
But, more importantly, if we're going to deal with
the supply, you touch it at the point of the demand.
And until something is done to touch the people
who are employing illegal immigrants because of
the very reason that they've talked about on this
stage, to create what amounts to another version
of slave labor, then we're never going to stop the
flow.
You're not going to get illegals to admit that
they're here illegally, because they're desperate
enough to do anything to feed their families.
What we have to do is to start putting the penalty
on the people who are most benefiting from them,
the employers who are using those laborers in order
to keep from having to pay decent wages.
Tavis: Governor, thank you.
The next question will be asked by Juan Williams
and be answered first by Senator Brownback.
Juan?
Williams: Senator Brownback, tonight, as young
Black and Latino Americans are watching this debate,
they often feel quite alienated from the Republican
Party, a party that does not seem to respond to
their issues.
You realize about 50 percent of young Black and
Latino people dropping out of high school, 35 percent
poverty rate, nearly 60 percent of America's prison
population Black and brown.
The one area of these problems touching on federal
government policy has to do with criminal justice.
Today, in Jena, Louisiana, it was announced that
one of the Jena 6, originally convicted as an adult,
will be tried now as a juvenile.
Name one reform, Senator, that you would endorse
to assure young Black and Latino people in America
that they will have equal justice in America's courts.
Brownback: Could you say the last sentence again?
Your mike's not on up here. I want to make sure
I hear.
Williams: Can you name one reform, one criminal
justice reform, that you would endorse to assure
young Black and Latino Americans that they will
have equal justice in America's courts?
Brownback: OK. I think I may be the only person
up here on this stage that's spent a couple nights
in jail, of my own volition, and I went in to look
at the system. I spent a night in a prison in Kansas
and I spent a night in a prison in Louisiana. I've
stayed in homeless shelters to answer and to get
a feel for what you're talking about.
And you hear about it very fast. And you get a
feel for it about how people have become loners
and went to crime, in some cases, and then caught
and want to turn their lives around. So it spawned
me to push the Second Chance Act.
It's something that we've gotten through the Committee
on the Judiciary, and what it's primarily focused
on is to help people if they have been caught and
they are in prison, that they not go back again.
Because right now in the United States of America,
if you go to prison, the chances of you going back
are two-thirds, 66 percent. That is a travesty that
that number is that high.
This bill in five years we cut it in half. A lot
of it is faith- based institutions. A lot of it
is mentorship and work programs. So we can help
people that are chains they can't break themselves.
Tavis: I hate to cut you off. Congressman Tancredo?
Tancredo: I believe that it was mentioned earlier,
and I certainly agree with the fact that first of
all, there are far too many criminal statutes at
the federal level. The Constitution establishes
the roles for the federal government and the state
government, and we have taken on far too many things
at the federal level, especially drugs laws -- mandating
certain penalties and that sort of thing.
I do not believe that that is the responsibility
of the federal government. That should be at the
state level, and I would certainly not support.
And as a way of reform, by the way, I would move
the federal government out of that whole business.
Now, let me say one thing other -- that, I think,
that has to be mentioned here. When you talk about
the crime rate, so much of this is connected to
another huge problem, and that you cannot take apart
and you cannot look at just in segments.
And that is this. The family -- what is happening
to the Black family in America today and what has
been happening for the last 40 years is a disgrace.
It is because, of course -- as I said earlier, the
welfare state has helped create this.
But you know what? The welfare state cannot be
the -- it can be the breadwinner, but it cannot...
Tavis: Congressman...
Tancredo: ... it cannot give you morals, values
or discipline. And that's what it takes...
Tavis: Congressman Tancredo...
Tancredo: ... in America today.
Tavis: Thank you, sir. Congressman Hunter?
Hunter: Thank you, Tavis.
Juan, I don't know as much about the facts as you
do in this particular case. But the facts, related,
that I read in "The Washington Post" was
that the one young man there was knocked unconscious
and was kicked in the head while he was unconscious.
And I would say this: This is the nation that has
rules of law based on accountability, and that that
accountability should be followed. And I don't know
what particular divisions between juvenile and non-juvenile
courts are being made in this case, but there must
be accountability.
If, in fact, the young man was kicked in the head
while he was unconscious, there has to be accountability
for that. And that is clearly criminal accountability.
Now let me go beyond that. You know, while we talk
about this, we've got hundreds of thousands of Americans
from all groups and all ethnicities depending on
each other, saving each other's lives, every day
being with each other in this partnership that we
call the U.S. military in Afghanistan and Iraq.
We ought to learn from them. And we ought to find
that common ground that's allowed them to go forward
together. That will make a great America.
Tavis: Congressman Hunter, let me jump in right
quick. This is the first time I've had to do this,
because I want to make sure we get answers to these
questions.
Your answer notwithstanding, Mr. Williams' question
was not answered by you, respectfully.
And that is: Is there a particular policy that
you would support to guarantee young Black and brown
men watching right now a fairer equal justice system?
That part you did not get to.
Hunter: OK. Here's my answer.
Tavis: OK.
Hunter: I don't think there's any way you can be
more fair then to have people in this country, under
this wonderful Constitution that we put together,
where people who are tried for criminal acts are
tried by a jury of their peers.
Juries, obviously, are blemished in many ways and
are not perfect, but a jury trial under the law
is, I think, the best system of justice on the face
of the Earth.
Tavis: Move on now to Ambassador Keyes.
Keyes: Well, I've always favored, and if you look
at a book I wrote some years back called "Masters
of the Dream," there was a proposal in it that
was part of a package of what we need to do to restore
real local self-government, which in our case would
be neighborhood self-government in a lot of our
urban areas.
One of the features of that neighborhood government
would be the reinstitution of what were called in
the old days things like justices of the peace.
They were people who lived in the community, came
out of the community, were empowered to judge offenses
committed by folks who were in and lived in that
community so that there would be sensitivity to
the truth that you're not just dealing with crooks.
Sometimes you're dealing with young people who,
if you treat them in the right way, can be put on
a path that will be constructive instead of destructive.
But only the people who live in the community would
understand that. So they need to have justices of
the peace. They need to have judges who come from
amongst them.
The other thing I would do is I would make sure
when people were in prison and they were being paroled,
that you had to consult the community and make a
deal. The community would agree to receive that
person back, but they would also promise to help
that person to establish a decent life.
So, that community partnership would be restored.
Tavis: Thank you, sir. Governor Huckabee?
Huckabee: Well, first of all, we really don't have
so much a crime problem in this country. We have
a drug and alcohol problem. Eighty percent of the
people who are in our prisons and jails are there
for a drug or alcohol crime. They either were high
or drunk when they committed the crime, or they
committed the crime to get high or drunk.
And what has made a huge mistake is that we've
incarcerated so many of the people who really need
drug rehab more than they need long-term incarceration.
In our state, we established over 20 drug courts,
that gave people an alternative course, rather than
just putting them in prison, giving them the opportunity
to get what they really needed, which is off the
addiction.
We've got to quit locking up all the people that
we're mad at and lock up the people that we're really
afraid of, the people who are sexual predators and
violent offenders.
But the nonsense of three strikes and you're out
has created a system that is overrun with people,
and the cost is choking us.
I would go for more drug courts and for a lot less
incarceration of drug-addicted people.
Tavis: Thank you, Governor. Congressman Paul?
Paul: A system designed to protect individual liberty
will have no punishments for any group and no privileges.
Today, I think inner-city folks and minorities are
punished unfairly in the war on drugs.
For instance, Blacks make up 14 percent of those
who use drugs, yet 36 percent of those arrested
are Blacks and it ends up that 63 percent of those
who finally end up in prison are Blacks. This has
to change.
We don't have to have more courts and more prisons.
We need to repeal the whole war on drugs. It isn't
working.
We have already spent over $400 billion since the
early 1970s, and it is wasted money. Prohibition
didn't work. Prohibition on drugs doesn't work.
So we need to come to our senses.
And, absolutely, it's a disease. We don't treat
alcoholics like this. This is a disease, and we
should orient ourselves to this. That is one way
you could have equal justice under the law.
Tavis: Thank you, Congressman.
The next question will be asked by Cynthia Tucker,
answered first by Congressman Tancredo.
Cynthia?
Tucker: Congressman, recently a push to give the
District of Columbia voting representation was defeated
because of heavy Republican opposition. In addition,
many voting rights advocates are worried about rigid
voter ID laws, which require photo ID, like a driver's
license.
Are you concerned that some eligible voters will
be denied the right to vote simply because they
don't have a driver's license?
Tancredo: Well, let's first take the issue that
you mentioned with regard to the District of Columbia.
It is not a state and, therefore, not entitled to
representation as a state.
If, in fact, you want -- if it becomes the desire
of the country to have that kind of representation,
then the district -- then it should be split up,
and the portion that was ceded to the federal government
by Virginia should go back to Virginia, the portion
that was ceded by Maryland should go back to Maryland.
Then they would be represented by states. It would
work.
Also, with regard to voting opportunities and the
use of a photo ID -- let me tell you that it is
really not that difficult to obtain. And I don't
think that we're asking too much of people when
they're doing something that is one of the most
sacred duties of anybody in this society, to actually
show that they are the person who they say they
are. I don't think that's asking too much.
And I think you can get a photo ID and they don't
even have to -- you don't even need a driver's license.
You can get a photo ID, a state ID, you can do it
relatively easily.
Tavis: Congressman? Thank you, sir. Congressman
Hunter?
Hunter: Well, thank you, Tavis.
You know, I might be a little more open to statehood
for D.C. if they would allow their citizens to be
able to keep and bear arms in their houses to protect
their safety.
And I offered that amendment a couple of years
ago. It passed and when it passed, the Democrats
brought down the entire crime bill rather than let
D.C. residents have the right to keep and bear arms.
And on the issue of allowing -- mandating some
type of ID, you know the first 21 Black congressmen
were Republicans who came out of the South, and
they went into a series -- they went into a series
of poll taxes and all types of deals that the Democrats
put in, road blocks the Democrats put in their place
to keep them from being able to vote.
So I don't agree with those types of stumbling
blocks. But I would say this: We have right now
a real danger of people that are illegally in the
country being rounded up, herded into the polls
-- we've seen that in California -- voting illegally.
That disenfranchises everybody in that community.
I think you have to have some IDs.
Tavis: Thank you, sir. Ambassador Keyes?
Keyes: I think the most important thing to remember
about Washington, D.C., is that it was established
to be a unique representation of the whole people
of the United States.
That's a city that's supposed to belong to the
nation, not to any one group and not to any one
region. That's why it was put together in the first
place.
I think it's terribly important to maintain that
symbol of the unity of our country. We're a free
people. If folks don't want to live in the conditions
that prevail in Washington because of its unique
status, they can go to Maryland. A whole bunch of
folks have done so.
They can go to Virginia. A whole bunch of folks
have done so. Some of the biggest churches and everything
else now exist in Prince George's County, because
people left the District.
They have that right, and I think that they can
exercise it. But I think that the country is entitled
to have this possession that symbolizes our whole
united people, standing together as one community.
I think it's terribly important that we sustain
it.
Tavis: Governor Huckabee?
Huckabee: Well, I may be a little different on
this one. I believe that the people of D.C. should
be able to vote for representation.
I think that's appropriate, for the simple reason
of equality and justice. And if we need to amend
the Constitution to make that possible, it should
happen.
D.C. is not the same city it was when it was first
created, and I think it just makes sense to not
have a group of people -- I don't care what color
they are, I don't care how they vote -- they ought
to be able to vote, and their color and their political
affiliation ought to have nothing to do with the
equality that we should give them.
As far as identification -- I have to show photo
ID to get on an airplane in my home town. I think
it's not asking too much to make sure that people
who are voting are truly eligible voters.
But look, if it's a driver's license issue, we've
gone to Motor Voter -- let's have Photo Voter so,
when you register to vote, they take your picture,
put it on a card, and you simply are able to make
sure that you're a registered voter.
That way it doesn't dilute the vote if a lot of
people who aren't registered voters try to fraudulently
vote.
Tavis: Thank you, Governor. Congressman Paul?
Paul: It's very clear, under the Constitution,
that we couldn't give the vote to the residents
of D.C. without an amendment to the Constitution.
And it should be pursued in that manner.
But when it comes to national ID cards, the identification,
I think the states have the prerogative and the
right and the obligations to identify the voters
and they should.
But the reason I get worried about when we start
talking about it nationally is, you know, they might
want to use the Real ID. They might want to think
it's a good excuse to have a national ID card to
vote, and I am positively opposed to any move toward
the national ID card.
Tavis: Thank you. Senator Brownback?
Brownback: Yes. It's a good question. It's a tough
question. I have chaired the D.C. Subcommittee,
both the authorizing and the Appropriations subcommittee.
I support the residents of D.C. the right to vote.
But there's a way to do it and there's a way not
to do it. And the way to do it is to amend the Constitution,
and the way not to do it is to pass something that's
unconstitutional.
In the 23rd Amendment to the Constitution, it gave
D.C. the right to vote for president.
But it didn't give them the right to vote for Congress.
And what you have to do what we have to do. And
what I support is amending the Constitution so they
can have the right to vote. D.C. deserves that right.
There's a way to do it, there's a way not to do
it.
Tavis: Ray Suarez will ask the next question, first
answered by Congressman Duncan Hunter.
Suarez: Congressman Hunter, the Federal Agency
for Health Care Research and Quality recently reported
that both Latinos and Blacks receive "significantly
worse," in their words, medical care than whites
in the United States.
One out of three Hispanics, one out of five Black
Americans is uninsured. Hispanics are 2.5 times
as likely as non-Hispanic, white Americans to be
uninsured. One of three Hispanics hasn't been to
the doctor in more than a year. And as has already
been mentioned, diabetes, asthma, hypertension are
untreated or under-treated in communities across
America.
What does your health care plan contain to address
some of these disparities in access to care and
access to quality health care?
Hunter: Well, Ray, the first thing I'd say is I
can't -- as a guy who practiced law in the barrio
and took lots of cases that anybody who couldn't
pay didn't have to pay, as people came into my office,
down there in the barrio in the waterfront in San
Diego, I didn't separate them out. So I'm not going
to separate them out now. And I'm going to talk
about how I think we can have affordable health
care.
The first thing you've got to have is the ability
to buy your health care insurance across state lines.
And right now, nobody in the United States can do
that.
And that means that the same policy that costs
70 bucks a month in Long Beach, California, costs
$343 a month in New Jersey, but the New Jersey policyholder
can't change policies and buy the policy in California.
So we've got to change that.
Secondly, I think we bring back the family doctor.
And I think one way you bring back the family doctor
is by taking away massive malpractice burdens, these
massive insurance premiums that we place on people.
And finally -- finally, Ray, let's try a little
freedom. How about if we said in the tax code that
if a doc will be a family doc, in the barrio, in
the community, and he will do office visits for
30 bucks or 40 bucks a visit, he doesn't have to
pay taxes on that, he doesn't have to have three
accountants, he doesn't have to do all those things?
Tavis: Congressman Hunter, thank you.
Hunter: Bring back the family doctor.
Tavis: Thank you. Ambassador Keyes?
Keyes: I think two things are important, very briefly.
First, before I would think about bringing back
the family doctor, particularly where the Black
community is concerned, it might be helpful to bring
back the family.
And that would mean that you are going to do what
is necessary to support married couples, to encourage
marriage, to encourage the rearing of children in
the context of a two-parent household.
Not because one is disparaging one-parent households,
but because the statistics show that people are
more likely to sustain their education, to be in
better health, both mentally and physically, if
they are raised in that environment.
That's step number one, and I think it's vitally
important.
The second step is we all know that in America
these days, your ability to have access to health
care depends on -- what? -- primarily: your job
and whether or not you're able to get that insurance
at your job.
So the first thing we need to take care of is to
make sure that in areas where Black folks and Hispanics
and others are living, you are encouraging the kind
of entrepreneurship that will create jobs in those
areas...
Tavis: Congressman Keyes, thank you, sir.
Keyes: ... to give people that foundation of health
care access.
Tavis: Governor Huckabee?
Huckabee: The first problem with our current health
care system is that it's upside down. It focuses
on intervention. We wait until people are catastrophically
ill, and then we spend enormous amounts of money
trying to fix them. We need to be putting the money
on the preventive side. Prevention is a lot less
expensive than is intervention.
The second thing, there has to be ownership of
the individual consumer. As long as the government,
the employer, as long as the doctor is in charge
of your health care, and you have no idea what it
costs, and you have no idea what they're doing,
and you don't control it, we're never going to get
the system fixed.
And the third thing that has to happen is that
we have portable medical records so that your health
care records go with you. They don't stay with your
doctor. You shouldn't have to ask permission to
see the records of your own body. Those are your
own records. They don't belong to anybody else.
And the policies that we can put in place have
to start with individuals buying in, not only on
insurance, but buying in on health, their own personal,
to start with.
Tavis: Thank you. Congressman Paul.
Paul: We've had managed care in this country since
the early '70s, and it hasn't worked well. It's
very, very expensive, and it's the fault that we
changed our ERISA law and our tax laws that created
this corporatism that runs medicine. Wall Street
rakes off the profits. The patients are unhappy.
The doctors are unhappy. And it's a monopoly now.
Who lobbies us in Washington? The drug companies
and the HMOs. They come.
And now what is the cry for? Socialized medicine.
That's not the answer. We need to get the government
out of the way. Inflation hits the middle class
and the poor the most. Those are the people who
are losing it. It's just not minorities, anybody
poor, because inflation wipes out the middle class,
and we have to deal with that.
If you have a product that's not dealt with by
government, prices go down when you have modern
technology. And medicine, with all this technology,
prices still go up. But that's because the government
is involved.
We don't have enough competition. There's a doctor
monopoly out there. We need alternative health care
freely available to the people. They ought to be
able to make their own choices and not controlled
by the FDA preventing them to use some of the medications.
Tavis: Congressman, thank you, sir. Senator Brownback?
Brownback: Ray, it's a serious question, it's an
important one. I've been in my state and communities
and in places experiencing what exactly what you're
talking about. Not on a personal basis, but seen
individuals that are having to go to a community
health center at the last minute, after the disease
has already really grown and pronounced itself and
they hesitate because they don't have insurance
coverage or they don't have the money to be able
to do this.
This is a real problem. It's real people that are
involved in this type of situation.
I think the question you have to ask is: Which
is the best way to go, then?
Do you do it with more government or do you do
it with more markets?
Because these are real people experiencing this.
And I pick more markets and real markets with it.
Because I have not seen, in this country, ever,
when the government enters into something on a bigger
basis, do we get higher quality service or more
of it?
We don't. It doesn't work that way. So I really
-- and one thing that hasn't been talked about up
here is health savings accounts. We need to expand
that so people can save money, tax-exempt, from
their work, the employers putting that in so they
can have some money for their health care coverage.
Tavis: Thank you, Senator Brownback. Congressman
Tancredo?
Tancredo: The important thing, the most important
thing to remember about your health care is it's
your health care. You have a personal responsibility
here, every single person does, to do everything
they can to stay healthy.
Most of the things that happen to us are lifestyle
problems, and, really, I mean, there are things
that we do to ourselves that cause us to then have
to access the health care industry.
We have to first look to ourselves, individually.
Again, it's kind of a scary thing again to say,
but, you know, individual responsibility does work,
also in health care.
And, yes, I believe, by the way, in the expansion
of health savings accounts because it does put you
in the connection -- it's you and you're the consumer
and the doctor, and there's nobody in between, and
that's good.
Also believe, by the way, that you should be able
to get your drugs from any place that, in fact,
it's cheaper to get drugs. If it's cheaper to get
drugs in Canada, get drugs from Canada -- it's OK
with me. We shouldn't be blocking that.
Again, individual freedom -- expand individual
freedom and take some individual responsibility
for your own health care.
Tavis: Thank you very much.
Next question asked by Juan Williams, first answered
by Ambassador Alan Keyes.
Wiliams: Ambassador Keyes, I think you're familiar
with the fact that America has a tradition of Black
military heroes, going from Crispus Attucks in the
Revolutionary War, to the Tuskegee Airmen in World
War II, to General Colin Powell.
And tonight, Tavis, I'd just like to take a moment
to acknowledge one of those heroes who's here with
us in the audience. We have with us Vernice Armour.
She's the first African American combat pilot in
U.S. history -- I should say, first female African
American combat pilot. And she served two tours
of duty with distinction in Iraq.
Today we see a decline in Black and Latino enlistment
because of one reason: the war in Iraq.
What do you say to the one-third of the nation
that's minority and overwhelmingly opposed to the
continuation of this war, even as the GOP in Congress
continues to block attempts to set a deadline to
end this war?
Keyes: I think the most important thing to remember
is that our efforts in Iraq and elsewhere right
now that followed in the wake of September 11 aren't
an effort to defend Black people, white people,
Jewish people, Christian people, et cetera.
They're an effort to defend the United States of
America from a deep and terrible threat that came
against us in disregard of the fundamental -- the
fundamental moral principle that is supposed to
govern all international affairs, all wars that
are conducted by countries, and that is that you
do not consciously target innocent human life.
My father was a soldier -- fought in Korea and
Vietnam and World War II, did not stand in defense
of this race or that, but stood in defense of the
common principles of moral decency and justice that
are derived from that premise that I talked about,
that our rights come from God.
I don't think it's hard to ask anybody in this
country to stand in defense of those principles.
My one criticism? I think unfortunately, President
G.W. Bush put a lot of emphasis on democracy for
people in Iraq, when our real goal is security for
people in America.
Tavis: Thank you, Ambassador. Governor Huckabee?
Huckabee: One of the tragedies is that our military
veterans have kept their promises to us; we have
not kept all of our promises to them.
Many of them have come back to be told to wait
in line for their health care, to be told that mental
health would be something that might be rationed
out.
That's not acceptable. And, if I were president,
I'd like to see us have a very plainly written,
simple-to-understand veterans' bill of rights that
would make sure that every single thing that these
veterans have been promised is delivered. And it's
delivered as the first fruits of the federal Treasury
before anyone else gets their nose in the trough,
the veterans get their benefits paid -- not on the
basis of a limited budget, but on the basis of making
sure that we keep promises to the people who have
kept us free.
That, I believe, will help people want to be a
part of the military.
Tavis: Thank you, Governor. Congressman Paul.
Paul: The most important promise we keep is the
oath to obey the Constitution. We just shouldn't
be going to all these wars.
We shouldn't have so many injured and in our hospitals
because we shouldn't go to war unless it's declared.
If it's declared, we should go win it and get it
over with. Now we're in this war for five years
or so and nobody sees the end to this.
So, we went in under false pretense. There were
no weapons of mass destruction. There are still
-- there are still people who believe that Iraq
had something to do with 9/11, yet 15 of the people
were from Saudi Arabia.
We need to live up to our principles so there are
less injured veterans, but when they come home we
better jolly well take care of them, and we're not
doing a very good job right now, because all the
money's going overseas.
We're broke. We got to do something about it.
And we can't -- we can't perpetuate a welfare state
and police an empire without going bankrupt.
Tavis: Congressman?
Paul: And we're nearly on the verge of that.
Tavis: Thank you, sir. Senator Brownback?
Brownback: One, I think it's clear what we need
to do at this point in time, and I think we need
to talk about at this point in time, where we are.
We declared war. We voted in Congress to go to war,
Republican and Democrats. People can say things
weren't right, we shouldn't have done this, shouldn't
have done that.
We are where we are today. The military, I believe,
has done and is doing a superb job. We have had
a terrible political answer on the ground in Iraq.
A terrible -- yesterday, in the Congress, a bipartisan
political solution passed. It was the Biden-Brownback
bill -- or, since I'm here, it was the Brownback-Biden
bill.
It declares a three-state federalized solution
to Iraq -- a Kurdish north, a Sunni west, a Shia
south, with Baghdad as a federal city; weak federated
government; most of the policies devolve down to
the local units of government. Because Iraq is less
a country than it is three groups of people. We
need to recognize that. And we can move forward
with that political solution...
Tavis: Senator.
Brownback: ... and pull our guys back.
Tavis: Thank you. Congressman Tancredo?
Tancredo: What's the constitutional responsibility
of the Congress when it comes to war?
It is, one, declare it; two, fund it; or three,
not fund it. That's it.
You know what, when you talk about, Juan, you talk
about the number of bills that we have killed because
of attempts to, sort of, end this thing?
Well, every one of them has inside of them all
these provisions about how have to fight the war,
how many people can be dispatched at any particular
point in time and who they can fight.
I will tell you this, that the founders of this
country knew very well that -- what would happen
to us if we ended up with 535 generals in the Congress
of the United States. And that is, you lose wars.
You need a commander in chief.
And then the Congress has every right -- and you
know what? It has every right to be involved in
it. It has every right to talk about this and to
condemn it if you don't agree with it.
But you know what? It ends up with this. If you
don't want it, don't fund it. But you cannot micromanage
it from the Congress of the United States.
Tavis: Congressman Hunter?
Hunter: Thank you, Tavis.
Vernice, thank you for your two tours in Iraq.
And I want to say I've got a son who's done two
tours as a Marine in Iraq.
He's getting to see a new country in Afghanistan
right now. And who knows? You may be there shortly.
Thanks for your service to our country.
Ladies and gentlemen, we can leave Iraq, and under
my leadership, we will leave Iraq in victory. And
let me tell you what I would propose.
The key to handing off the security apparatus in
Iraq, now that we've stood up a free government
-- and it is a free government. It's stumbling along,
it's inept, but it's a free government. The key
to a security handoff is to have a reliable Iraqi
army.
Right now, we've got 131 battalions in the Iraqi
army. We've trained them and we've equipped them,
and we are moving them into the battle.
And my recommendation to the president, the Joint
Chiefs and General Petraeus is to make sure that
every one of those 131 battalions gets at least
a three- or four-month combat tour in a contentious
area. When they are battle-hardened, we can rotate
them into the battle zone, rotate our America's
heavy forces, Marines and Army, and bring them home.
That's the right way to leave Iraq, in victory.
Tavis: Congressman Hunter, thank you.
We've covered a lot of ground tonight. We're starting
to get a little tight on time now, just a few minutes
left in this conversation.
I would like to then use the moderator's prerogative
and privilege to ask you now if we can squeeze a
couple more questions in, to cut your answers down
to 30 seconds and see if we can't get a couple more
questions in right quick.
Cynthia Tucker will ask next; answered first, 30
seconds, by Governor Huckabee.
Tucker: Governor, does the U.S. have a role to
play in ending the genocide in Darfur? And, if so,
what should that role be?
Huckabee: I think we have some role t |