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| Congressman Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.),
chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus' immigration task force |
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| In
its first year, Janet Napolitano's ICE deported 387,790
immigrants — far
more than during George W. Bush's last year in office.
If the trend line Bush’s enforcement structure set in
motion continues, Napolitano is on pace to deport around
half a million people a year by 2013. |
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Congressman
Gutierrez Pushes Obama To Make Good On Campaign Promises
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By Lucia
Graves & Elise Foley, Huffington Post) April 2, 2011 — Rep. Luis Gutierrez
(D-Ill.), chairman of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus' immigration task force,
announced a national campaign to hold President Obama accountable for promises
he made on the campaign trail to reform the country's broken immigration system.
Featuring the stories of families devastated by deportations, "Change Takes
Courage" will hold events across at least 20 states, Gutierrez announced at a
press conference on Capitol Hill.
The campaign
will include meetings and press events with local leaders and immigration
advocates designed to put pressure on the administration. The first will be held
on this afternoon at the Instituto Biblico de Rhode Island in Providence;
another will take place in Honolulu, Hawaii, the president's birthplace, in May.
Spearheaded by the Fair Immigration Reform Movement, a coalition of more than
200 immigration advocacy groups, the campaign will contrast clips of the
promises Obama made on the campaign trail with two years of Congressional
inaction, and spotlight the flesh-and-blood experiences of families torn apart
by deportation.
"We are gathered here today ... to acknowledge that change takes courage, and to
respectfully tell President Obama now is the time for him to find it," said Eva
Millona, a member of FIRM’s executive council and executive director of
Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition.
Among the changes the campaign is asking for: granting parole to students
eligible for the DREAM Act, parents of citizen children, and immigrants with
deep roots in the community; and greater protections for all workers, including
a moratorium on audits and ensuring the right to organize.
Maria Bolanos, a 29-year-old undocumented immigrant from El Salvador, appeared
at Thursday's event with her two-year-old daughter to explain how in December of
2010, after calling the Prince George's County police for help with an abusive
husband, she was detained by immigration authorities. The campaign will rely on
stories such as Bolanos' to illustrate the shortcomings of programs like Secure
Communities, which has been a mainstay of the Obama administration's immigration
enforcement efforts and has helped generate a record number of deportations.
Obama promised during his campaign to push for immigration reform, and
reiterated in his State of the Union last year he would advocate laws to allow
some undocumented immigrants to gain legal status. But facing criticism from the
right, he has stepped up immigration enforcement, deporting record numbers of
undocumented immigrants and sending more troops to the border than ever before.
Despite increased enforcement, Congress did not budge on its opposition to
immigration reform. In December, the last remaining hope for immigration reform
died when the Senate voted down the DREAM Act, a bill that would allow some
undocumented young people to gain legal status if they went to college or joined
the military.
With a Republican-controlled House that includes immigration hawks such as Reps.
Lamar Smith (R-Texas) and Steve King (R-Iowa), even advocates acknowledge no
immigration reform is unlikely to come out of Congress in the next two years.
But they argue Obama should do more to prevent deportation of families and young
people who would be DREAM Act-eligible.
On Monday, Obama dismissed the idea of using his executive powers to halt some
deportations, telling students at Bell Multicultural High School in Washington,
one of whom was holding an order of deportation, his powers would not allow him
to stop deportations by executive order or assign Temporary Protected Status.
"With respect to the notion I can just suspend deportations through executive
order, that's just not the case," he said.
According to the campaign, though, there are a number of legal options for Obama
to avoid deporting students or parents and spouses of American citizens. For
starters, advocates say he should make sure his programs do what he has said
they aim to do: deport “the worst of the worst,” undocumented immigrants who
have committed dangerous crimes or are deemed a threat to safety in the United
States.
Programs such as Secure Communities, which puts the fingerprints taken by local
police through DHS databases to net undocumented immigrants, are designed to put
criminals in deportation proceedings, immigration officials say. But they also
net a number of innocent people, such as Bolanos, because police fingerprint
people who may never be charged with a crime or convicted. About 25 percent of
immigrants who are detained under the program have not been convicted with a
crime, according to data released by ICE and analyzed last week by a coalition
of critics of the program.
In Prince George’s County, Md., where Bolanos lives, the percentage of
non-criminal immigrants detained under Secure Communities data is even higher,
according to a report from the National Day Laborer Organizing Network, Center
for Constitutional Rights and Benjamin Cardozo School of Law’s Immigration
Justice Clinic. About 65 percent of the immigrants detained through the program
are never convicted of a crime. The only county with a higher rate is Jefferson
Parish, La., where 72 percent of immigrants caught up in the program are not
convicted.
“Secure Communities in Prince George’s County is nothing short of a crisis,”
Gustavo Andrade, a community organizer with Latino advocacy group Casa de
Maryland, told The Huffington Post. "We should be using our resources to be
making our communities safer, not to be hunting people down and separating
families.”
The program has expanded rapidly under the Obama administration, even against
the will of local law enforcements and city officials. Despite initially calling
Secure Communities a voluntary, “opt-in” program, Homeland Security Officials
announced in October communities could not exempt themselves from the program.
More than 1,100 communities are already part of the program, and DHS plans to
expand Secure Communities nationwide by 2013.
“The ultimate responsibility still lies with the president who has chosen to
make SCOMM his signature enforcement program,” Andrade said.
Gutierrez said he hopes the Change Takes Courage campaign will convince Obama to
make changes to Secure Communities that keep non-criminals from deportation,
particularly in cases of students or family members of U.S. citizens. The
campaign does not advocate the president issuing an executive order or issuing
Temporary Protected Status, but asks him to use discretion based on an internal
ICE memo leaked last summer.
“We understand he has the responsibility and obligation to enforce the law, but
we’re asking him to use discretion he has,” Gutierrez said.
The document, a memo from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Director
Alejandro Mayorkas, offered seven “relief options” to avoid deportation for
certain individuals. Immigration officials quickly distanced themselves from the
memo after it was criticized as “backdoor amnesty” for undocumented immigrants.
“This is not amnesty,” Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.) said on Thursday. “It is
simply the right thing to do, and we must do it now.”
Gutierrez said the campaign would also remind Obama that his 2008 victory was in
part thanks to the immigrant population. But he stopped short of saying Obama
would lose support from immigrants in 2012.
“I’m here because I want him re-elected, because I want him to achieve a second
term as president,” he said. “I’m here to say, 'Mr. President, join this
community in showing balance so I and others can go out there and make sure you
have a resounding victory.'” |
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