Two former Texas governors, both Republicans, have become targets of the righter-than-right wing of their own party.
First it was George W. Bush, then it was Rick Perry who said that children who were raised in Texas by undocumented immigrants deserves to be allowed to public colleges and universities by paying in-state tuition.
No can do, says the state’s lieutenant governor, Dan Patrick, who now plans to seek to remove that perk when the Texas Legislature convenes in January.
Bush and Perry were right. Patrick is wrong.
https://www.texastribune.org/2016/09/09/dan-patrick-will-try-again-end-state-tuition-undoc/
These students are Texans. They have been raised as Texans — and Americans. They came here as children when their parents fled their home countries south of us. They grew up to become fine citizens, good students and are able to achieve great things for their adopted home country.
Why deprive them of the chance to further their education by removing the in-state tuition opportunity?
Perry was pilloried by the TEA Party wing of the GOP when he ran for president in 2012 and again this year simply because he supports the long-standing tradition of granting in-state tuition privileges to these young Texans.
As the Texas Tribune reports: “Passed with near-unanimous consent in 2001, the policy allows non-citizens, including some undocumented immigrants, to pay in-state tuition rates at public colleges if they can prove they’ve been Texas residents for at least three years and graduated from a high school or received a GED. They must also sign an affidavit promising to pursue a path to permanent legal status if one becomes available.”
Regular readers of this blog know I’m no fan of Gov. Perry or of Gov. Bush.
On this matter, though, they showed a humane side to their conservatism that has gone missing in action.