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Immigration Reform Top Tier Issue
for Obama
WASHINGTON (By Gebe Martinez,
Politico) December 9, 2008
―
It is the issue few candidates were
willing to discuss publicly before
the election. Even in victory, the
word “immigration” has barely left
the lips of President-elect Barack
Obama.
But in the presidential transition
offices, immigration is cited as a
top-tier issue that Obama will have
to tackle early in his
administration. It has also been
assigned its own study group, one of
seven working groups created by the
transition team to examine high
priorities.
Given that it intersects with the
economy, health care, education and
other key concerns, immigration is
too complex a topic to ignore. As
economic and health care initiatives
are rushed out of the gate in
January, proposed immigration
reforms will likely be close behind.
And Obama and congressional
Democrats can no longer avoid the
issue that raises fears of hate
speech and false arrests of citizens
and legal immigrants at work sites
while angering border control
hard-liners. Immigration woes stand
as a symbol of a broken government,
and the onus is on Democrats to
govern.
Backers of a broad bill that would
combine border enforcement with
expansion of visa programs will not
forget Obama’s campaign pledge to
produce an immigration bill during
his first year in office.
The heat is on.
“We are not forgetting about our
promise with regard to the immigrant
community,” Melody Barnes, Obama’s
top domestic policy adviser, pledged
during a forum last week that drew
2,000 community organizers to
Washington. It was sponsored by the
Center for Community Change and the
Gamaliel Foundation, for which Obama
was once an organizer.
“We will start making down payments
on that agenda,” Barnes added.
Those “down payments” are expected
to come in the form of
administrative rules changes
advocated by a broad coalition of
immigrant and civil rights groups,
businesses, labor groups, and the
faith community. The revisions could
be ordered while Congress works on
broader legislation.
Immigration activists are pushing
for a moratorium on raids that have
rounded up thousands of workers this
year alone, traumatized and
separated families, and violated
basic civil rights.
While workers have become easy
targets for authorities who want to
portray stepped-up enforcement, the
abusive employers who take advantage
of the broken system and exploit
undocumented workers have often been
ignored.
The vast and inefficient immigration
detention network also has deprived
many of their legal rights. There
have been reports of legal permanent
residents dying while in custody.
In addition, immigration policy
experts say the long bureaucratic
delays on background checks and
processing visas, and the
ever-changing policy directives
inside the Department of Homeland
Security, require immediate
attention from the new
administration.
Notably, the agency does not have a
person at the top to coordinate and
streamline the procedures, and Obama
has been urged to fix that, as well.
Meanwhile, business and labor groups
won a federal court ruling this week
that stops the Bush administration
from accelerating rules that would
prosecute businesses that fail to
fire workers whose Social Security
numbers do not match the Social
Security database. Employers
complain that the federal database
is unreliable.
Right now, we have an immigration
strategy that focuses on fear. We
need a policy that serves the
national interest,” said John
Trasvina, president of the Mexican
American Legal Defense and
Educational Fund.
In an effort to keep the pressure on
the incoming administration, Rep.
Luis V. Gutierrez (D-Ill.), an Obama
ally, will be turning over to the
transition team about 1,000
testimonials from citizens and
family members who say they were
torn apart by an ineffective and
almost inhumane immigration system.
This weekend, Gutierrez gathered
more than 30 evangelical church
leaders, representing 15,000
parishioners, at a forum demanding
changes in immigration law.
Outside Washington, the “279 votes”
campaign for a broad immigration
reform package is being readied in
states such as Arizona, California,
Georgia, Illinois, Massachusetts,
Mississippi, Nevada, New Jersey, New
York, Texas and Washington.
At the local level, community,
church, business and labor leaders
have been working for months on a
revamped, pragmatic lobbying effort
that is exploring which proposals
can win the support of their
hometown lawmakers to get the 218
House votes required to pass a
comprehensive bill, plus the 60
Senate votes needed to overcome
procedural hurdles, as well as the
president’s signature, for a total
of 279 ayes.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid
(D-Nev.) recently told Gannett News
Service he did not expect “much of a
fight at all” on immigration
legislation. Perhaps, after having
twice tried and failed to pass a
bill in the current session, the
prospect of having seven more
Democrats in the Senate gave him a
downhill view.
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.)
acknowledged after the election that
the immigration debate “is a path
that we must go down.”
The toughest argument facing civil
rights groups comes from those who
say bad economic times shrink the
job market and add to the stress and
competition with immigrants for
jobs.
But without legalizing those who are
now in the country illegally, the
only winner is the bad employer who
exploits workers. Improving the
economy, health care and education
helps all workers, the advocates
maintain.
Even in a recession, there are still
millions of jobs that only
undocumented workers are willing to
do.
“Comprehensive immigration reform is
part of the solution, not the
problem, with respect to our
economic difficulties today,” said
Wade Henderson, president of the
Leadership Conference on Civil
Rights.
The new Obama administration and the
stronger Democrat-controlled
Congress should not be afraid of
ending a fear-based immigration
system, said Trasvina.
“I don’t think Obama has much to
learn,” he said. “He does know the
community, and he knows the
immigrant workers.”
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