• Home
  • Today
  • Advocacy
  • Forum
Donate
  • login
  • register
Home

They need you!

Forum links

  • Recent changes
  • Member list
  • Search
  • Register
Search Forums
 
Advanced Search
Go to Page...

Resources

  • Do I qualify?
  • In-state tuition
  • FAQ
  • Ways to legalize
  • Feedback
  • Contact us

Join our list

National calendar of events

«  

September

  »
S M T W T F S
 
1
 
2
 
3
 
4
 
5
 
6
 
7
 
8
 
9
 
10
 
11
 
12
 
13
 
14
 
15
 
16
 
17
 
18
 
19
 
20
 
21
 
22
 
23
 
24
 
25
 
26
 
27
 
28
 
29
 
30
 
 
 
 
 
Sync with this calendar
DAP Forums > DREAM Act > The News Room

New push for immigration reform will target 9 House Republicans

  • View
  • Post new reply
  • Thread tools
  • 1
  • 2
  • next ›
#1
11-07-2013, 09:20 AM
Senior Member
Joined in Nov 2010
381 posts
Morrow's Avatar
Morrow
0 AP
Quote:
A campaign set to be announced Thursday will marry the financial and political power of the AFL-CIO and SEIU labor unions with smaller grass-roots immigrant advocacy groups, including America’s Voice, PICO National Network, Mi Familia Vota and CASA in Action, to target nine House GOP lawmakers who support establishing a way for eligible immigrants to apply for U.S. citizenship.

The campaign will target Reps. Jeff Denham (R-Calif.), David Valadao (R-Calif.), Howard “Buck” McKeon (R-Calif.), Gary Miller (R-Calif.), Scott Tipton (R-Colo.), Mike Coffman (R-Colo.), Daniel Webster (R-Fla.), Steve Pearce (R-N.M.) and Joe Heck (R-Nev.). They represent districts with sizable Latino voting populations where President Obama won or performed well last year. They also have publicly voiced support for revamping the nation’s immigration laws.

Organizers said the goal of the campaign is to pressure the lawmakers to match their public statements by lobbying colleagues and House Republican leaders to permit votes on a series of immigration bills introduced in recent months. If the nine lawmakers fail to convince their colleagues by the end of the year, the groups plan to devote more resources to defeating them in next year's elections and to expand their campaign.

"This is designed to tell Republicans that if you don't take action on reform, there will be people who will take action in districts where Republicans are vulnerable to mobilize Latino and immigrant voters to reward or punish a member of Congress," said Frank Sharry, executive director of America's Voice, a leading national immigration advocacy group.

"A Republican majority in the House depends on people in vulnerable districts winning," Sharry noted. "It just seems [House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio)] and company are more worried about members being primaried by tea party challengers than their members in districts with growing Latino populations. This is designed to tell them, ‘Guess what -- you’d better worry.’ "

The House is unlikely to consider any immigration legislation before Congress passes another short-term spending plan in mid-January, according to top Republican aides. Even if debate ever begins, Boehner and his lieutenants have said they will not support a comprehensive Senate plan that would allow illegal immigrants to pursue citizenship over a 13-year period, saying they will consider a series of smaller-scale bills.

House lawmakers are on recess this week, but a visit to Capitol Hill last week by hundreds of conservative business and religious leaders helped persuade some GOP lawmakers to take another look at the issue, said Sen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), who cosponsored the Senate plan passed this summer.

"There seems to be new life in the House on this," he said Wednesday.

Flake served for 10 years in the House before ascending to the Senate in January and remains in close contact with House Republicans. He said there is growing interest in establishing ways for the children of undocumented immigrants and certain farm workers to more quickly gain U.S. citizenship, while establishing ways for the vast majority of undocumented immigrants to seek a permanent legal status.

"There’d be no special path created, but they would not be precluded from taking one of the paths that already exists," Flake said.

Flake said there's likely to be bipartisan support for the proposal, "because that’s the only way a deal can be had. I think there’s a good-faith effort underway on both sides of the aisle."


Congressional Democrats also remain hopeful that House Republicans will quickly take up the issue, possibly in December before another round of negotiations over a short-term spending bill in January.

Sen. Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.), who worked with Flake on the Senate deal, has held several telephone conversations on the subject with senior GOP lawmakers, according to aides.

“Certainly politically it would benefit us if [House Republicans] don’t pass any bill, and they can’t pass any bill without some Democratic votes. But the overwhelming view of Democrats is that we’d sacrifice that political advantage to get a bill that moves America’s immigration policy forward,” Schumer said Wednesday.

The campaign launching Thursday will include outreach to nearly 90,000 voters in the nine districts through door-to-door outreach and phone calls. Additionally, the AFL-CIO announced plans Tuesday to spend more than $1 million on a bilingual television ad campaign in Bakersfield, Calif., Denver, Atlanta and Orlando and in the Washington, D.C. market. The SEIU plans to announce a similar ad campaign Thursday, according to people familiar with the plans.

Of the lawmakers targeted, Denham and Valadao have endorsed a comprehensive immigration bill authored by House Democrats that merges elements of the bipartisan Senate immigration plan passed over the summer with a bipartisan border security plan passed unanimously by a House committee in May. Denham said last week that he met with a good reception when he discussed the bill with colleagues during their weekly caucus-wide meeting.

Several of the other targeted Republicans reiterated their support for immigration reform this week but said they're still reviewing the various proposals.

Aides to Heck said the congressman believes the House should act "in a timely manner." Miller said in a statement that he plans to "closely examine the merits and consequences of any proposal." Coffman said he is eager to work on the issue, "but that is appearing less likely given the limited time that is left on the calendar."
BY ED O'KEEFE
__________________
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
Morrow
View Public Profile
Send a private message to Morrow
Find all posts by Morrow
#2
11-07-2013, 09:53 AM
Senior Member
Joined in Apr 2009
846 posts
DreamBig09
0 AP
tick tock tick tock. Time is running out :]
__________________
» Application for AOS sent : 1/23/2019
» Case accepted via text: 1/29/2019
» Receipts received on 2/4/2019
» Biometrics noticed received on: 2/8/2019 COMPLETED SAME DAY
» Biometrics Appointment: 2/19/2019
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
DreamBig09
View Public Profile
Send a private message to DreamBig09
Find all posts by DreamBig09
#3
11-07-2013, 10:11 AM
Senior Member
Joined in Aug 2011
5,714 posts
IamAman's Avatar
IamAman
0 AP
Keep hope alive!
__________________
Late 40's Dreamer (Holy Fucking shit I'm almost 50 and still dealing with this), aged out of original DACA and didn't have a chance to apply for extended DACA after Republicans killed it on the vine.
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
IamAman
View Public Profile
Send a private message to IamAman
Find all posts by IamAman
#4
11-07-2013, 10:34 AM
Senior Member
Joined in Aug 2012
2,113 posts
VeryNicePerson1's Avatar
VeryNicePerson1
0 AP
I hope this mobilization works, these dudes are pumping millions into this if another article is anything to go by.

Hopefully they keep this shit running until end of next year the earliest. Just oust as many republicans as possible out of their seats, so we can see if Democrats really will let things progress forward if it was up to them.
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
VeryNicePerson1
View Public Profile
Send a private message to VeryNicePerson1
Find all posts by VeryNicePerson1
#5
11-07-2013, 03:09 PM
BANNED
Joined in May 2009
6,763 posts
DA User
0 AP
I think CIR will pass this month.
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
DA User
View Public Profile
Find all posts by DA User
#6
11-07-2013, 03:29 PM
Senior Member
Joined in Dec 2010
124 posts
dexterchach
0 AP
yup. hope u guys been saving money for the application fees. the time has come.
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
dexterchach
View Public Profile
Find all posts by dexterchach
#7
11-07-2013, 05:12 PM
Senior Member
Joined in Feb 2010
339 posts
NK74
0 AP
So basically, even if the campaign is completely successful and forces each Republican on that district succumb, CIR still won't pass because 9 Republican votes aren't remotely enough to turning the cause.

Count this as an operation mostly aimed at helping the Democratic Party.
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
NK74
View Public Profile
Send a private message to NK74
Find all posts by NK74
#8
11-07-2013, 06:55 PM
Senior Member
From San Francisco Bay Area
Joined in Oct 2007
637 posts
MAGraduate's Avatar
MAGraduate
0 AP
This entire CIR fight, at least from D.C., is about 8-9 Congressional seats.

I'm sorry to those who have been duped by the establishment.
__________________
Founder, Managing Attorney at Lal Legal
Formerly Undocumented
J.D., The George Washington University Law School, 2013
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
MAGraduate
View Public Profile
Send a private message to MAGraduate
Find all posts by MAGraduate
#9
11-07-2013, 09:44 PM
Senior Member
Joined in Aug 2009
3,115 posts
dtrt09
0 AP
This is ridiculous, what are people supposed to do in the meantime???

Forgive me, but I pay my bills on-time, pay my taxes on-time, arrive and finish my work on-time, efficiently, underpaid, and now, now, thanks to Obama's right-wing ACA, my health-insurance coverage is in danger. I'm undocumented, but guess what? I have had my own health insurance since I was a teenager in 1995 to date. Not welfare, Medicaid, DSHS...but my OWN premium-pd, employer sponsored plan. I lose my job, I lose my insurance. I lose my job or walk out for being underpaid, I lose insurance and my livelihood without work authorization to be free to search work elsewhere.

Now imagine what it feels like to have your entire family depend on you and you are enslaved to your undocumented circumstances. I think the President should expand deferred action for now and THEN let Congress take its sweeeet, looooong time drafting, re-drafting, discarding, tossing and bullshitting their CIR legislation.
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
dtrt09
View Public Profile
Find all posts by dtrt09
#10
11-07-2013, 09:50 PM
Senior Member
Joined in Aug 2012
2,113 posts
VeryNicePerson1's Avatar
VeryNicePerson1
0 AP
Quote:
Originally Posted by dtrt09 View Post
This is ridiculous, what are people supposed to do in the meantime???

Forgive me, but I pay my bills on-time, pay my taxes on-time, arrive and finish my work on-time, efficiently, underpaid, and now, now, thanks to Obama's right-wing ACA, my health-insurance coverage is in danger. I'm undocumented, but guess what? I have had my own health insurance since I was a teenager in 1995 to date. Not welfare, Medicaid, DSHS...but my OWN premium-pd, employer sponsored plan. I lose my job, I lose my insurance. I lose my job or walk out for being underpaid, I lose insurance and my livelihood without work authorization to be free to search work elsewhere.

Now imagine what it feels like to have your entire family depend on you and you are enslaved to your undocumented circumstances. I think the President should expand deferred action for now and THEN let Congress take its sweeeet, looooong time drafting, re-drafting, discarding, tossing and bullshitting their CIR legislation.
^ This 100%, I just cannot stand everyone waiting...there needs to be a broader, expanded temp relief.

Obama: Oh hey guys, CIR is #1 priority, myself and the Democrats are behind you guys 100% and we will get you and America the CIR that is needed

Undocumented: Mr. President, we respect that...but you guys can't possibly be ok with arguing over this for years and years to come while we continue to be stuck between a rock and a hard place...please just expand a relief program, so we can have something while you all debate endlessly

Obama: Sorry, can't do that...it may jeopardize our seats, and its not nice to bypass the Congress like that...

Undocumented: ....


Obama needs to just set up the relief NOW!!! Is it really that bad for him, for Democrats...would they really lose the entire Congress and the White House because of humanitarian relief? Would it really be impeachment worthy?
  • Reply With Quote
Post your reply or quote more messages.
VeryNicePerson1
View Public Profile
Send a private message to VeryNicePerson1
Find all posts by VeryNicePerson1
  • 1
  • 2
  • next ›


« Previous Thread | Next Thread »

Thread Tools
Show Printable Version Show Printable Version
Email this Page Email this Page

Contact Us - DREAM Act Portal - Archive - Top
Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.