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DAP Forums > DREAM Act > The Lounge

Reform debate updates !!! - Page 9

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#81
02-22-2007, 07:35 PM
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FrankV,nice article I was just about to post it myself.

Here are some more articles.

In this article Orrin Hatch says that he expects a good immigration bill before years end in the House.
Quote:
Hatch spoke about immigration during his presentation to the Utah Senate, telling senators that "we're a nation of laws but we're also a nation of immigrants." He said laws must be enforced but added, "I'm not sure Congress is going to do a very good job of doing that."
In the House, Hatch said he expects a good immigration bill to pass before the end of the year. "But so far everything is wrapped up in Iraq."
The new www.newsrecord.org/media/storage/paper693/news/2007/02/21/Opinion/Immigration.Bill.Covers.All.Bases-2732069.shtml]immigration bill[/url] is indeed due for this month that is currently being written by Kennedy.This article also touches base on what the bill aims to accomplish on a basic platform
Quote:
Sens. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and John McCain (R-Ariz.) are rewriting the comprehensive immigration bill passed by the Senate last year, but died in the House. They plan to introduce their legislation this month.
Finally the best news of all,Reform debate begins next week.
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#82
02-22-2007, 07:50 PM
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Wild!!
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#83
02-22-2007, 08:41 PM
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That great info Ianus, so it starts next week.
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#84
02-23-2007, 12:20 AM
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here we go again" thanks Ianus.
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#85
02-23-2007, 01:02 AM
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Alright... I was feeling soooo down!
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#86
02-23-2007, 05:06 AM
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Yeah Fuck ALIPAC 123 fuck ALIPAC yeah you bitch ass motherf+++++
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#87
02-23-2007, 01:25 PM
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Quote:
Immigration reform returns to Congress


As Congress returns to the subject of immigration, the Bush administration has stepped up arrests and deportations of immigrants. Meanwhile, in his State of the Union message, Bush once again stressed the creation of a new guest worker program. Both have to be countered by the immigrant rights movement.

Bush’s motives for ratcheting up repression are not hard to guess. His administration has been extremely consistent in emphasizing a greatly expanded guest worker program as the “solution.” He also talks vaguely about legalization, but it is the guest worker part that really interests his corporate supporters.

And combining his talk about guest workers and reform with vicious raids makes sense tactically, for it tends to push both employers and immigrants into accepting a guest worker program in order to get out from under the pressure.

Service Employees Union President Andy Stern, in an open letter to Sen. Edward Kennedy last month, listed the following things as essential for any guest worker program to be acceptable to his union:

• Portability of visas (guest workers should be allowed to switch jobs in mid-stint),

• Right of guest workers to join unions and exercise all other labor rights,

• Right of guest workers to bring their families with them,

• Ability of guest workers to petition for permanent resident status without permission from the employer,

• Enforcement mechanisms to protect the interests of both the guest workers and other workers, and

• No requirement to return home after a limited stint working in the U.S.

This would be, on paper, a considerable improvement over what was in the bill the Senate passed last year, or even the McCain-Kennedy Bill that SEIU and others supported. But what Stern describes is not the kind of guest worker program that employers want or that Bush would accept.

Bush made clear that he wants a guest worker program in which workers would be forced to go back to their countries of origin after their stint. He promotes a guest worker program in order to please major sectors of big business that want the cheap labor “legally,” but also pitches to anti-immigrant forces with a promise that the workers brought here to be exploited will also not have either labor rights or social services. This is incompatible with Stern’s stipulations.

The AFL-CIO has taken a position in opposition to any guest worker program as “harmful to all workers.” Existing guest worker programs are prone to grotesque abuses. For example, last week Mexican guest workers in Louisiana protested against a contractor for holding onto their passports so that the workers could not escape his clutches, and would be forced to keep working despite the fact that the employer had reneged on promised conditions of work.

Supporters of guest worker programs say that even if all 12 million undocumented immigrants were legalized, huge numbers would still cross the border to find work, because the home country pressures that cause immigration would not have changed. It is better that such people be enabled to come legally. But it does not follow that a new guest worker program is the best or only way to do this. The U.S. government has been issuing only 5,000 work-related permanent resident visas per year to people in the main job categories in which most undocumented workers are employed. It would be far better to adjust this figure radically upward than to bring in guest workers, because permanent residents have more enforceable rights.

Right now, the immediate fight is to stop the current spate of raids and other repressive actions.

An important national initiative has begun. Under the leadership of the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement, the American Friends Service Committee, the League of United Latin American Citizens and hundreds of other local and national organizations, there is a push for a moratorium on all raids and deportations until Congress can craft an acceptable comprehensive immigration reform program.
Another article, March seems to be the Month immigration is starting to become the main issue now.
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#88
02-23-2007, 01:57 PM
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Awesome. We'll see if they do anything about it this year.
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#89
02-23-2007, 06:32 PM
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There's an article that has some more information on the upcoming Immigration hearing next week Wednesday from the Washington times.It basically dictates that the hearing is merely an attempt the for 'the Bush administration to confirm publicly that it wants "comprehensive immigration reform" this year'.

The article also mentions that Kennedy's CIR bill will be introduced officially sometime after next week.Which basically indicates to me anytime after March 4th lol,can you say more waiting ?
Quote:
Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick J. Leahy will hold a hearing next week that he hopes will get the Bush administration to confirm publicly that it wants "comprehensive immigration reform" this year.
"Chairman Leahy is looking for the Bush administration to walk the walk on comprehensive immigration reform," Tracy Schmaler, spokeswoman for the Vermont Democrat, said yesterday. "President Bush has publicly indicated his support for comprehensive reforms that would provide a realistic solution to bringing millions out of shadows, improve internal and border security and meet the pressing needs of employers for willing workers."
Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez and Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff will testify at the Wednesday hearing.
The White House yesterday said Mr. Bush remains committed to comprehensive reform, which many Republicans fear will contain some sort of amnesty for illegal aliens and usher millions of new foreign workers into the country...........

..................As the Senate begins the process of considering bipartisan legislation, Chairman Leahy believes it is important for the committee to hear from administration officials, in clear and unequivocal terms, their commitment to passing comprehensive immigration reform this year," Miss Schmaler said.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Massachusetts Democrat, plans to introduce a major bill sometime after next week, his office said yesterday.
The Immigration bill by Kennedy hasn't even been released publicly & yet we already have a House Republican Shadegg already barking at it.I won't attempt to quote since it's just a waist of space,lol.
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#90
02-24-2007, 01:40 AM
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Quote:
NewsTrack - Top News
Published: Feb. 22, 2007 at 12:30 PM
New immigration reform bill coming
WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 (UPI) -- U.S. Sen. Ted Kennedy is finalizing immigration legislation that would make it easier for illegal aliens to gain citizenship, a Washington newspaper reported.

The Washington Times reported Thursday that the bill backed by Kennedy, D-Mass., would weaken enforcement provisions included in immigration legislation approved by the Senate last year.

The newspaper said U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., and lobbying groups including the Essential Worker Immigration Coalition and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce were involved in writing the legislation.

"It's good for the country," EWIC immigration lawyer Laura Reiff said in the Times.

Some Republicans, including U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., who as chairman of the Judiciary Committee shepherded last year's immigration bill through the Senate, complained they've been left out of talks over this year's bill.

"I raised the issue again and a Kennedy staffer said there was nothing in writing," Specter told the newspaper. "Neither my staff nor I have seen any draft."

Kennedy spokeswoman Laura Capps said, "The bipartisan coalition behind the bill remains strong and intact."
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