Monday, November 06, 2006
Sali speaks out for English: Official language issue called a 'diversion'
BOISE, Sep. 13, 2006 (McClatchy-Tribune Business News delivered by Newstex) --
Congressional candidate Bill Sali called Tuesday for declaring English the official language of the United States, while his opponents dismissed the move as a "diversion" from real issues.
"Those who know English tend to land better jobs, earn more money, and have less dependence on government resources," Sali, a Republican, said at a press conference on the state Capitol steps. "With English as our official language, everyone will have an equal opportunity to rise up and improve their condition."
Sali said if elected to Idaho's open 1st District congressional seat, he'd sign as a co-sponsor of H.R. 997 by Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, which would declare English the official language, require "official functions of the government to be conducted in English," and require all new citizens to pass English tests.
Sali, a longtime state lawmaker and former chairman of the House Health and Welfare Committee, said he hoped brochures and materials handed out for health and welfare programs wouldn't need to be offered in any language but English in the future.
"The first step is to teach people English," he said. "If this plays out correctly, we shouldn't have a need to distribute literature in other languages."
Sali said his ancestors learned English when they came to this country.
Candidate Larry Grant, a Democrat, said, "I think we have more important problems to solve in this country than this kind of thing. I think we need to be talking about how do we get control of spending, how do we get control of corruption, how to end the war in Iraq. This is a diversion so they don't have to talk about the real problems."
Grant, former vice president of Micron Technology (NYSE:MU) Corp., recalled growing up in Fruitland, Idaho, in an area with a substantial Japanese-American population.
"Half the grandparents couldn't speak English, and that didn't make them bad people, didn't make them bad Americans," he said.
Andy Hedden-Nicely, the United/Natural Law party candidate for the seat, said, "We'll be happy to respond, in English, to anything Bill says about the real issues in this race: Congressional term limits, health care coverage, high gas prices, decent wages, protecting our borders, improving our schools and the war in Iraq."
He added, "Bill's up to his usual trick of trying to bait the hook with red-meat, emotional issues while totally ignoring the fundamental challenges facing our country. He thinks he can win using the standard Republican rhetoric, but we know 1st District voters are concerned about things that really impact their lives."
Independent Dave Olson, of St. Maries, who also is running for the seat, couldn't be reached for comment, nor could Constitution Party candidate Paul Smith, of Letha.
Sali said he didn't know the details of how the congressional legislation would work, but picked the bill because he said it's getting widespread support. According to congressional records, the bill was introduced March 1, 2005, and referred to a House subcommittee a month later. It has 161 co-sponsors, including both Idaho GOP representatives, Mike Simpson and Butch Otter.
Sali said he's heard it takes only a six-week course to bring non-English speakers to a "conversational level."
"We're not talking about a huge commitment," he said. "We're just talking about a willingness to participate."
Grant chuckled at that. "I had a year and a half of French and I still can't speak French," he said.