By Cole Hill (staff@latinospost.com) | First Posted: Jan 31, 2013 02:46 PM EST

Everyone's favorite squawking parrot of bottled rage, Ann Coulter, has seen Marco Rubio's bipartisan plan for immigration reform, and she's got some choice words for the Republican leader: the Florida Senator is a "wolf in wolf's clothing," according to Coulter.

Rubio's immigration plan, put forth by a bipartisan group of senators - referred to as the "Group of Eight" - including New York Democrat Charles Shumer, would offer over 11 million illegal immigrants currently living in the U.S. a pathway to citizenship, something Coulter, along with some other conservative critics, cannot and will not abide. The bipartisan push toward granting immigrants amnesty is nothing more than a cynical attempt by Rubio to gain more Democratic voters, said Coulter.

"Some Republicans seem determined to create more Democratic voters, too. That will be the primary result of Sen. Marco Rubio's amnesty plan," Coulter wrote in a letter to Human Events.

Rubio's plan would allow illegal immigrants capable of passing a background check in the U.S. the opportunity to achieve a working permit and later a green card after paying taxes and fees. The proposal differs significantly from the current pathway to citizenship, which immediately deports immigrants back to their country of origin where they're then forced to wait a decade before they can apply for a green card.

"Rubio's bill is nothing but amnesty," Coulter wrote in response to Rubio's proposition. "It isn't even 'amnesty thinly disguised as border enforcement.' This is a wolf in wolf's clothing."

Rubio's plan also calls for tougher border protection and penalties for businesses that hire undocumented workers. But, still Coulter claimed Rubio's proposal failed to address his own motto of "Enforcement First" by giving illegal immigrants immediate rights while denying those same rights to others that have followed the correct process.

"The ability to live and work legally in America is the most valuable commodity in the world; it's the Hope Diamond of the universe. I know young, well-educated Canadians who waited a decade for that privilege," Coulter wrote. "People who have broken our laws will thus leap ahead of millions of foreigners dying to immigrate here, but - unwilling to enter illegally - waiting patiently in their own countries," she barked in a rare moment of candor.

Rubio and the other senators in the "Group of Eight" argue that the plan isn't technically amnesty because of the grueling path still required to gain citizenship.

"I just think he's nuts," Sen. David Vitter said Wednesday on the Laura Ingraham radio show.

Regardless of Coulter's feelings, it looks like President Barack Obama is going full speed ahead to put the new immigration reform proposal into practice. President Obama says that a comprehensive bill on immigration could become law in just six months.

Speaking with Spanish networks Univision and Telemundo Wednesday, Obama said the bipartisan bill that was proposed was on the path of a "reasonable timetable" and could even be passed in the first half of 2013.

"I can guarantee that I will put everything I've got behind it," Obama said on Telemundo. "We're putting our shoulder to the wheel."

Obama has publicly supported the bipartisan plan and is encouraging the GOP to accept the agreement as well.

"It's important for us to recognize that the foundation for bipartisan action is already in place," Obama said, referring to the bipartisan plan during his speech Tuesday. "And if Congress is unable to move forward in a timely fashion, I will send up a bill based on my proposal and insist that they vote on it right away."

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