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RALEIGH -- Illegal immigration was a hot topic Wednesday as the candidates for lieutenant governor met.
Democratic state Sen. Walter Dalton, former Republican Sen. Robert Pittenger and Libertarian Phillip Rhodes also outlined very different plans on education, health care and state government in the hourlong debate on UNC-TV.
Dalton and Pittenger said they would not support allowing illegal immigrants to study at the state's community colleges, while Rhodes said he thought it would be fine as long as they pay out-of-state tuition.
Here are some of the positions outlined by the three candidates for lieutenant governor at a debate on UNC-TV Wednesday:
WALTER DALTON, DEMOCRAT:
* Create health insurance pools to increase coverage.
* Spend more on mass transit.
* Create more community crisis centers on mental health.
ROBERT PITTENGER, REPUBLICAN:
* Create tax credits to encourage businesses to provide health insurance.
* Enact competency testing for public school teachers.
* Hire more auditors to evaluate state programs.
PHILLIP RHODES, LIBERTARIAN:
* End the state's mental health care programs.
* End the use of eminent domain by state and local government.
* Lower barriers to home schooling.
A month ago, the State Board of Community Colleges voted to bar illegal immigrants until it could complete a study. The lieutenant governor is a member of that board.
Pittenger said the state had not gone far enough to make the state inhospitable to illegal immigrants, praising efforts by states such as Oklahoma and Georgia to cut back on social services they could use.
He also attacked Dalton, saying he voted to allow illegal immigrants to get driver's licenses. In a series of votes over the past eight years, the legislature made it more difficult for illegal immigrants to get licenses but stopped short of making it impossible until 2006.
After the debate, Dalton said that at each step he voted to tighten the restrictions on driver's licenses.
"Every vote I ever cast was always intended to make it stricter," he said.
On other issues, Dalton said he would raise the compulsory education age to 18, expand access to health care and continue to promote entrepreneurship programs.
"As we face these new challenges from a troubled and changing economy, we need leaders with experience," he said.
Pittenger said he would pay school teachers based on merit not tenure, reduce medical malpractice litigation and cut the personal income tax rate.
"Tax money belongs to the taxpayer, not the tax collector," he said.
Rhodes, a first-time candidate, said he would increase competition in schools with a voucher program, end state government's involvement in mental health care and eliminate many government regulations on business.
"Government exists only as the collective extension of our individual right to self defense," he said.
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