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What Jeb Bush really means when he says 'anchor babies'
08/24/2015   By Amanda Sakuma | MSNBC
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McALLEN, Texas — Jeb Bush’s tour of the communities along the U.S.-Mexico border Monday was supposed to be a trip to distinguish his immigration plan as more realistic and grown-up than those of his presidential opponents. Instead, the former Florida governor was back defending what he really means when he says “anchor baby.”

Bush said that he used the term specifically to refer to fraud – sometimes called “birth tourism” – in a “specific, targeted kind of case” involving mothers who travel to the United States only to win citizenship for their unborn children. “Frankly, it’s more related to Asian people coming into our country, having children in that organized effort taking advantage of a noble concept which is birthright citizenship,” Bush told reporters at a bustling Mexican restaurant just miles from the U.S. border.

Bush’s comments mark a clumsy attempt to pivot away from the controversy surrounding his recent use of the term “anchor baby.” The phrase, considered offensive by many in the Latino community, typically refers to children born in the U.S. to non-citizens.

Bush used the term last week during an interview with conservative radio host Bill Bennett, saying “If there’s abuse, if people are bringing — pregnant women are coming in to have babies simply because they can do it, then there ought to be greater enforcement … That’s [the] legitimate side of this. Better enforcement so that you don’t have these, you know, ‘anchor babies’, as they’re described, coming into the country.”

Presidential candidates from both parties have since criticized Bush – who previously described immigration as an “act of love” – for saying it.

But Bush continued to dig in his heels, saying it was “ludicrous” that the term “anchor baby” would be considered derogatory. 

“This is all how politics plays. And by the way, I think we need to take a step back and chill out a little bit as it relates to the political correctness that somehow you have to be scolded every time you say something,” he said.

Bush had spent the day meeting with local leaders to talk about the issues for border towns, particularly striking a balance between allowing businesses to thrive through commerce with Mexico while ensuring that the border is secure.

He took aim at real estate mogul Donald Trump, denouncing the Republican front-runner’s proposal to force Mexico to foot the bill for a wall to span the entire 2,000-mile southwestern border. Later, Bush’s campaign released a video with a mashup of prominent conservative pundits who have criticized Trump’s plan as being “catastrophic.”

“Trump’s plans are not grounded in conservative principles,” Bush said. “It would cost hundreds of billions of dollars, it’s not realistic, it won’t be implemented and we need border security to be able to deal with getting this country back on track.”

Leading conservatives agree. Donald Trump’s immigration plan is a recipe for disaster https://t.co/cK8Xrt8KSi

— Jeb Bush (@JebBush) August 24, 2015

Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, took the opportunity Monday to liken Bush and Trump on immigration. 

“Following Donald Trump’s tour of the Texas border, Jeb Bush decided to follow his lead once again by touring the South Texas border to discuss his opposition to a pathway to citizenship and doubling down on the hateful term “anchor babies” when describing the children of immigrants. The Jeb Bush that will visit the border today is not the same Jeb Bush that many in the Latino community thought they knew,” Clinton campaign spokesman Jorge Silva said in a statement that accompanied a video response to Bush’s border visit.

Earlier in the day, Bush attended a fundraising luncheon, where contribution levels were set as high as $15,000 to enter an elite group of GOP donors called the Texas Leadership Committee. 

Bush was in familiar territory with deep-pocketed donors who hope to see his family’s dynasty retake the White House.

He is just the latest presidential candidate to visit the border in recent weeks, where issues of immigration and calls for tighter border security reign supreme. 

“Border security means safety,” Bush supporter Belinda Rodriguez said at his event. “It means being able to sleep at night.”

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