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Janet Napolitano = Homeland Futility

Janet Napolitano’s Sorry Service in Arizona Makes Her a Terrible Choice for Homeland Security Secretary

Consorting with anti-immigrant enforcers, indulging rank opportunism, and adhering to failed policies seem an unlikely recipe for change we can believe in. And yet this very cocktail of mediocrity — stirred by an early endorsement of Barack Obama — has thrust Arizona Governor Janet Napolitano into the heady midst of Washington's inaugural speculation.

She finds herself on the president-elect's short list for a cabinet seat, as well as on Saturday Night Live's hot seat for parody.

Chris Whetzel
In 2006, Napolitano speaks to Kansas National Guard members at the border at Yuma, along with Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius.
In 2006, Napolitano speaks to Kansas National Guard members at the border at Yuma, along with Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius.
Social Eye Media
In 2006, Napolitano speaks to Kansas National Guard members at the border at Yuma, along with Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius. In 2006, Napolitano speaks to Kansas National Guard members at the border at Yuma, along with Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius.

The governor captured the front page of American journalism this month with the announcement that she is the frontrunner to take over the Department of Homeland Security. Napolitano must protect this nation's borders and ensure our safety from terrorism and natural disasters while overseeing billions of dollars in contracts in service of theses goals.

Janet Napolitano has considerable experience failing at administrative oversight.

But it is her role in securing Arizona's frontiers that bears scrutiny.

Confronted with a border state's unavoidable immigration challenges, Napolitano defended the citizenry with a devil's pitchfork. Her multi-pronged strategy: embrace the nation's most regressive legislation; empower a notorious sheriff using cynical political calculations; employ boots on the ground.

And yet she remains beloved by Democratic apologists. Those who cling to Napolitano point out that the alternative to her tepid, and occasionally disgraceful, leadership would be a Republican. That sends her partisan supporters to the fainting couch.

Her faithful base, supine with the vapors, is in no position to consider the record.

Here, quite simply, is the situation.

According to September's GAO report, Homeland Security squandered $15 billion in the past five years on contracts that failed, fell behind schedule, or were over budget. From Katrina to airport security, federal money grew on stunted trees.

And there is little reason to believe this is the sort of mess Napolitano can untangle.

In Arizona, the Department of Transportation, which Napolitano oversaw, bungled billions, the largest contracts in the state's history, by hiring firms embedded with the state agency's former employees and cronies. The ballot proposition that made all this possible was financed, of course, by the very corporations that stood to benefit. The glaring favoritism in the roadway contracts precipitated expensive litigation ("Friends at Work," Sarah Fenske, June 1, 2006).

Furthermore, Homeland Security, like every government agency, is under acute budgetary pressures having little to do with malfeasance.

Facing similar revenue shortfalls in Arizona, Napolitano ducked hard choices, refused to tighten the state's belt and opted for accounting gimmicks: highway radar to raise funds with increased ticketing of motorists; future lottery money diverted to current funding gaps.

Mere corruption, greed, and the cupidity of boondoggle bookkeeping in hard times — these are simple things to understand, if not sanction, within a state government.

But when the Valley of the Sun was in crisis, when the community was torn apart by the worst human-rights tragedy in the state's history, the central villain owed his political power to Janet Napolitano.

And when Arizona became the epicenter of anti-immigrant fever, when armed militiamen patrolled our southern flank with Mexico, our governor followed the advice of a notorious outlier congressman, an anti-immigration foghorn of despair.

She militarized the border.

The mere suggestion of work visas or a reasonable path to citizenship for the 12 million Mexicans living in America burned both President George W. Bush and John McCain in the wildfires of anti-immigrant populism before the election.

Immigration was the only major issue facing this nation that was studiously avoided by the candidates in the presidential campaign. The future of this hot-button issue is, at best, murky.

In Arizona, Governor Napolitano fed — and fed upon — the anti-immigrant fever that rages in our state. Though Napolitano's reputation is that of a modest progressive, her true profile is that of a pragmatist who is willing — in fact, is adept — at riding political currents.

She has signed several pieces of legislation that have criminalized that most human desire: the need to work and feed one's family.

This remarkable definition of lawbreaking behavior has created an era in Arizona that is the equivalent of a new Prohibition. Once, teetotalers, the temperance movement, and the anti-saloon league drove us into the Noble Experiment and the hands of mobsters. Today, those who migrate here seeking work, like those who once sought drink, are increasingly in the grip of organized crime.

"As the border gets tighter and tighter, it requires more professional smuggling operations," said Jennifer Allen of the Border Action Network. "It makes everyone more desperate to ensure that the cargo gets across."

Governor Napolitano took a page from the anti-immigrant playbook and deployed the National Guard to the state's border with Mexico.

"Cartels fight for corridors, violence increases as they move contraband across the border. We've seen increased violence with the militarization," observed Allen.

And that violence has moved north away from the borders and into our cities.

There is little argument that Governor Napolitano was an accomplice.

She signed a piece of legislative mischief in 2005 known as the anti-smuggling statute. Designed to further criminalize organized smuggling, the law was redundant, and she was counseled not to lend her support.

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  • 3000 KILLED ON 911 12/03/2008 1:53:00 AM

    EASY TO SEE BAMA HAS FAILED US ALREADY AND THERE WILL BE NO HOPE WITH ZIONIST STOOGES EMANUEL BIDEN CLINTON GEITHNER ALL ROUND HIM. GOOGLE "ZIONIST CRIMES"

  • Terry in AZ 12/02/2008 11:03:00 PM

    Wow - as an Arizona progressive, I have to say I haven't heard such crap since I last listened to Fox News. Your characterization of Napolitano is so far off, it's ridiculous. Suggesting that Napolitano is on the same wavelength with "Sherrif Joe" is absurd. I won't go into all the other innuendo and 'guilt by association' in the article - that kind of tactic is the same used by Republicans against Obama and shows ignorance and a lack of a real argument. If you want our country to continue polarization to the point of civil war, keep writing junk like this. But Governor Napolitano has managed to bring together people with conflicting viewpoints here in Arizona. In a state that's incredibly conservative, she has been elected twice by a large majority, and she has never abandoned her core liberal values. Yes, she's a pragmatist. Obama also calls himself a pragmatist. That means they will actually accomplish something instead of creating more division. Get over it.

  • Susan Fry 12/02/2008 12:07:00 AM

    What a disgusting hatchet-job this is. One can only wonder what ax you have to grind to have written something so slimy about such a rare, gifted and intelligent woman. There is a reason why Gov. Napolitano carried EVERY county in Arizona in her re-election -- and that is as a never-married woman in her 50s, and a progressive Democrat in the state of McCain and Goldwater. You are stuck in some college political club sandbox and don't seem to understand that the issues that Gov. Napolitano has to deal with in her state are large, very complex and HIGHLY divisive. They include environmental/water issues, native American rights, and immigration. The genius of Napolitano has been that she has been able to take people like you and your opposites -- people with polarized views who have no intention of ever listening to anyone else-- and forging some compromise and consensus. For everyone like you, there is someone who thinks the answer is to round up every illegal immigrant and ship 'em across the border or build a fence that's 50, 100, 1000 feet high. None of this is possible and it's never going to happen and it's never going to work. Napolitano has been a voice of REASON amid the histrionics or refusal to deal with these issues. We desperately need her obvious ability at realpolitik and her willingness to work tirelessly to forge consensus and suggest solutions since these problems are not going to disappear, no matter how much people jump up and down and scream at each other. Mexicans need jobs and we need cheap labor. We have vast numbers of undocumented aliens. AS she has so often said, our government needs to stop sticking its head in the sand because this is too hot a political potato and come up with some viable plans and strategies for absorbing a percentage of illegals based on some criteria and creating a guest-worker system. I have read basically everything about Napolitano in the last 6 months and while some of it contained criticism, yours is so far out of step that it's clear you either want to be the crass "shock jock" of journalism or you have a personal vendetta. Either way, it's a shameful piece.

  • SFinSF 12/01/2008 11:51:00 PM

    This is one of the most outrageous and misguided pieces I've ever read in the media. Janet Napolitano is one of the very finest governors in the United States. As a single woman and a progressive Democrat in the state of McCain and Goldwater, she carried EVERY SINGLE COUNTY in her re-election. When you consider the enormous diversity of Arizona culturally, ethnically, economically, that should tell you something. Janet is so popular amongst her electorate and her fellow governors, etc., etc., etc. because she understands that the issues she has to deal with regarding the environment/water, schools, immigration, etc. are very difficult, thorny issues -- and ones that can be extremely polarizing and divisive. Her gift is in being a consensus builder -- getting people to look at the realities at hand and forging a REALISIC path forward. Your diatribe totally discounts that and makes it clear that you don't understand how desperately realpolitik is needed in wake of the Bush disaster. I have read virtually everything that's been written about Napolitano in the last six months. Many look at strengths and weaknesses -- but you are the ONLY person who has written anything like this kind of mean, nasty and unvalidated attack. You seem to be the "shock jock" of politcal journalists -- and we all deserve something much, much better.

  • Gayle 12/01/2008 8:03:00 AM

    You are right, she is a sorry choice for Homeland Security and I hope that a ton of Republicans stand up and argue against her! Her state has been OVER RUN with illegals since she has been Gov...what a lousey track record she holds! I find it very odd that this blog is so pro illegals when a majority of the 9-11 terrorists entered this country illegally! Maybe they should have aimed those jets at the building holding the village voice? Under Nepalitano I can just see ANY illegal will be welcome and given amnesty, even if they are a terrorist! But then again, who knows who has already snuck across our border in AZ already? I always wonder at those who are so pro illegals and amnesty just WHERE do these people think we will get the money to support 20 million of them? Usually these people are too stupid to realize that these 20 million will then be allowed to bring in their family members, up to 200 of their closest relatives, you all do the math, if each one of the 20 million illegals given amnesty brings in just 15 relatives, just WHERE are they all going to live? That is another 300 million people, guess the economy and social services and environment are not important to these pro-amnesty people?

  • hahn 11/28/2008 4:58:00 AM

    This piece is pretty harsh and really off target. Just a thought. Propositions or iniatives are put on the ballot because they can't get through the state legislature or will be vetoed by the Governor- not because the governor put them there. Being the Governor of Arizona is a pretty tough position. I couldn't imagine fighting the worst/most uneducated state legislature in the country every step of the way as I tried to make any kind of sound judgement. By the way, Arizona voters are the ones to blame when it comes to our crappy legislature and poorly run state.

  • AS 11/27/2008 6:10:00 PM

    What is wrong with protecting our borders? I have a problem with the notion that we should accept every economic refugee. Must we absorb the poor of central America when there are political refugees who are regularly sent back to their home countries to face unimaginable horrors? If we do not control our borders, we have no idea who is here. Should we accept convicted felons from other countries too? If I went to Mexico and lived there without a visa, I would be charged with a felony. Why is it that the US is wrong, according to the author, for enforcing its own immigration laws? We do not imprison people for being here illegally, we just deport them. I think that the US should build a fence along the lines of the "iron curtain." It should have one electrified fence, then a ditch 20 feet deep and a mile wide, with another electrified fence. Such a fence is necessary because illegal aliens do not respect the integrity of our borders, the Mexican police forces along the borders are often in league with human and drug traffickers, so we cannot expect their help on enforcing the law. I am as liberal as they come, so do not think that I am a right winger. And, I would call for the same provisions if the persons who treat our immigration laws with contempt if they were white, black, Asian, or anything else. It is not about race. Lastly, people like me who believe in protecting our borders are not anti-immigrant. I support the right of an immigrant to be here. But, people who live and work here without appropriate documentation are not immigrants, they are illegal aliens. An immigrant is someone who has successfully completed the process of obtaining permission from the US government to live and work here. Immigrants and illegal aliens are not the same. They are two legally distinct groups.

  • Steve 11/27/2008 7:05:00 AM

    I used to like this website. After reading the article on Napolitano, I now think this website should be called "The Village Idiot".

  • Jay 11/27/2008 5:20:00 AM

    This is a no brainer; she is a horrible choice. But in the game of "Chess" we call politics, Napolitano is self-serving and, hence, the reason for the endorsement of Obama. Hillary would have NEVER appointed Napolitano to ANY post...the endorsement was self-serving only. Ask any resident of Arizona--who lives in the border towns of Douglas, Nogales..or even Tucson..how the borders are doing. Napolitano has been an insult to the intelligent voter. Too bad Matt Salmon lost by 1-2% in his run against her.

  • Delaware Bob 11/27/2008 2:11:00 AM

    There is no doubt that ILLEGAL ALIENS have caused more problems than anyone could have ever imagined. These problems WILL NOT go away until each and every ILLEGAL ALIEN is out of this Country and back in their own country where they belong. What gives them the RIGHT to be here breaking our immigration laws? Yes, WHAT RIGHT? I believe it is up to the States to pass laws like Arizona, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Missouri and a few other States. If this happens, and it can, this time next year we will have something to be thankful for. Having our Country back and free of the slime that invaded this beautiful Country!

 

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