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Wednesday, July 08, 2015

New York Times Debunked: Scott Walker’S ‘I’M Not Going Nativist’ Conversation Never Happened

A conversation about immigration between Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and the Heritage Foundation’s Stephen Moore, reported on by the New York Times this week, never happened.

“We have spoken with Stephen Moore and the conversation that was reported did not happen and he will tell you that. I would recommend you reach out to him,” Walker spokeswoman AshLee Strong told Breitbart News on Thursday in response to an article by Jonathan Martin and Maggie Haberman.

On Thursday, the reporters wrote: “Stephen Moore, a conservative scholar at the Heritage Foundation who backs an immigration overhaul, called Mr. Walker’s embrace of a border-security-first approach ‘A lurch to the right and probably something very popular among Iowa conservative voters.’”

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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Actually it doesn't matter what Scott Walker's views on immigration are nor even what 'pro growth immigration' is. What does matter though is that he is pro deceit and cover-up. A presidential candidate who wants to close and secure his would-be administration.
A couple of quotes from the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
"..Walker spokeswoman Laurel Patrick acknowledged for the first time the role of the governor's office in developing the now-scrapped records proposal, confirming it after Republican legislative leaders had identified Walker's involvement."
And:
"That change would have allowed state and local officials to keep from the public information about the process used to make their decisions. Other abandoned changes on public access to records would have allowed lawmakers to keep private nearly all documents they maintain."
We've already got one of these in the WH now. Why in the world would someone vote for another one?