Cameron supports the DOJ trial against the tuition fees of illegal immigrants from Kentucky

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The former prosecutor general of Kentucky Daniel Cameron, the Frontrunner GOP For the retirement of the headquarters of Senator Mitch McConnell in 2026, told Fox News Digital that the lawsuit of the Ministry of Justice on the reduced tuition fees for illegal immigrants was exactly the type of fight for Kentuckians.
Cameron castigated the Governor Democratic Andy Beshear, the best -appointed defendant in the costume, after the Beshear office told Fox News Digital that the potential hope in 2028 had no connection with the issue of educational regulations.
“Andy Beshear is still trying to pass the bar. The fact is that he is the governor of the Commonwealth and he controls the executive branch. He can appoint people on the various advice and commissions that exist,” said Cameron.
“He even has a trial at the moment against the office holders elected to the state scale in the Legislative Assembly, essentially saying that he controls the Ethics Commission. And, therefore, you cannot have his cake and eat it too.”

General prosecutor of Kentucky Daniel Cameron (AP)
Cameron praised the Attorney General Bondi For having carried the case, saying that it is happy that the doj reviews an “absurd” policy.
“I think it is time that we took care of our American citizens as opposed to the illegals,” said Cameron.
“I think that our legislature, the Republican Legislative Assembly, rightly tries to regain control,” added Cameron, while a bill crosses Frankfort who would prevent the illegal from being considered as state residents for educational purposes.
“This governor tries to work by Fiat, and our legislature is trying to restore balance, if you want,” he said.
“It is a question of protecting the position of American citizens. I mean, the idea that we would give reduced or subsidized tuition fees, tuition fees for illegals are just an absurd notion, especially when you tell Americans outside the state they have to pay the full freight. This does not pass the odor test,” he said.
When he was contacted to comment, Beshear’s political strategist, Eric Hyers, rejected these characterizations.
“We get Daniel Cameron with his attempt to return political, but that does not mean that he can invent things,” said Hyers.
He added that the regulations authorizing tuition fees for the illegals had been designed two decades ago and that “if he had a problem with his legality, he should have done something while he was Attorney General”.
“The reality is that this is set by an independent council, and the governor has no examination of it; the legislature controlled by the GOP the fact. If it was such concern, the supermajority of the GOP could have adopted the bill to remedy it which was introduced by the last session by one of their own members,” said Hyers.
In his interview, Cameron also warned that the question of border security itself has considerably affected its state by other means, citing the Fentanyl epidemic of the Appalachians.
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“Kentuckians deeply care to ensure that we protect our borders and that we make sure that people are legally here.
“Since President Trump was in office, as he declared in his spouse in Congress, we did not need a new policy, we needed a new president. So that has changed, but the Kentuckians still recognize the concern about the illegals who enter this country, bring poison in this country which harms our communities or commits a sort of violent crime.
“President Trump is determined to help people who work hard in this country. And it is only another facet of this.”
Cameron also noted that he directed the other great republican, the American representative Andy Barr of Kentucky, in the race to replace McConnell.
However, Kentucky tends to make a tendency to bluer in the last elections and has an electoral make -up similar to the Pennsylvania of the Swing State, which has a Democratic Governor and, until recently, a majority republican legislature.
Beshear defeated Cameron in 2023 about five points, while the holder, son of former governor Steve Beshear, extended an upheaval against the republican governor Matt Bevin with a fraction of a point in 2019.
Senator Rand Paul, R-Ky., Beat the state representative Charles Booker, D-Louisville, of more than 20 points in 2022, while McConnell won a closer race against Lieutenant-Colonel retired Amy McGrath in 2020.