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DAP Forums > DREAM Act > The News Room

Obama, Immigration and His Legacy

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#1
12-26-2010, 11:06 AM
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Joined in Dec 2010
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Strategy
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http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Networ.../message/43976

Obama, Immigration and His Legacy

By Maria de los Angeles Torres

(December 24, 2010)

Last weekend the Senate failed to pass the DREAM Act.

It would have provided a path to citizenship for thousands of undocumented,
foreign born American youth who have successfully graduated from U.S. high
schools and wanted to either go to college or serve in the military.

The President can wag his finger at the Republicans and a few Democrats who
failed to vote for the bill.

However, he should also reflect on his and his advisors' role in fueling the
flames of anti-immigration.

Since taking office a year and half ago, the Administration has vigorously
implemented immigration enforcement, without defending the need for immigration
reform or using his position to humanize immigrants.

More immigrants --- including young people --- have been deported under this
Administration than any other in the history of the United States.

This year alone they are poised to deport over 400,000 immigrants.

Criminalizing immigrants without providing relief has fueled anti- immigrant
sentiments, making reform more difficult.

Using anti-immigrant stances to appeal to conservative voters was a strategy
conceived by Democrat Rahm Emanuel who was in charge of his Party's 2006 midterm
elections (a fact not lost on Chicago's immigrant communities).

He branded immigration the "third rail" of American politics and instructed
candidates in conservative districts to take a hard line against immigrants.

This short-lived strategy failed to produce reliable voting partners in Congress
and indeed most of the Blue Dogs ended up losing their elections this last time
around. \


A different strategy --- indeed supported by 65% of American voters and almost
80% of Latino voters --- would have put the Democrats at the forefront of
immigration reform.

This would have positioned them to consolidate a historic realignment of Latino
voters --- the fastest growing bloc in the nation --- towards the Democratic
Party and simultaneously positioning themselves as world leaders on a critical
issue.

After all, immigrant labor is an essential part of global economies and what
better country than the United States to lead on this issue.

Deploying Executive Powers In the face of inaction by Congress, the President
has the opportunity, indeed the responsibility, to use his executive powers to
alleviate the situation.

He can use his parole powers selectively to include students who would qualify
under a DREAM Act as Senators Durbin and Lugar have asked.

He can order a moratorium on deportations that divide families.

He can emphasize deportations of those convicted of violent crimes not just
minor offenses.

He can protect those who are contributing to our economy. He can stop sucking up
local enforcement resources that instead should be used to fight local crimes.

He can certainly humanize conditions in detention centers.

In the past, he has dismissed this approach by claiming that he took an oath to
uphold the law and that the will of Congress is to deport those here without
legal documents since they appropriate monies to do so.

With this textbook interpretation of Congressional mandate, he has inadvertently
created a quota system resulting in a record number of deportations, which has
had the effect of poisoning public debate about this issue and has not delivered
Republican support.

Even as he dismisses arguments based on human rights concerns, he should
understand that there are also compelling economic and political reasons to use
executive power.

Why deport students in whom we have invested years of public monies to educate
and who are about to begin contributing to its economy, one in desperate need of
a young labor force?

Why divide families that are an integral part of our communities?

Why not provide leadership in the face of a fear and hatred that is destroying
important elements of our democracy?

There is no denying that this is a very complicated issue.

The United States does have a long history of rejecting, particularly in
economic hard times, but also accepting into our political community immigrants
(as well as others) who have been excluded on the basis of their nationality,
race, gender and age.

Congress has not always led the difficult fight to be tolerant and more
inclusive.

Presidents have had to step in, Lincoln is one example, so are Presidents
Kennedy and Johnson who in the early 1960s paroled over 300,000 Cubans,
including me, who were in the United States without proper documentation.

This was done in the midst of public outcry about security concerns and fears
that Cubans would change "the complexion of the city of Miami and that someday
they would demand the right to vote."

Only much later did Congress pass the Cuban Adjustment Act that provided a quick
path to citizenship.

The President is absolutely right in pointing out that comprehensive immigration
reform is the answer and that Republicans are the main obstacle, but in the
meantime he needs to own up to his own Party's shameful opportunism on this
issue and exert leadership.

Prior to his election, President Obama made promises he could only keep if
elected.

He is now in the White House, and he will be judged by whether or not he uses
his powers to begin fixing a broken immigration system he so deplored during his
campaign.

A first step would be to place a moratorium on the deportation of "Dreamers," an
act that would contribute positively to his presidential legacy, a legacy that
will be tarnished if he fails to address this civil rights issue of the day.

Maria de los Angeles Torres is a professor and director of Latin American and
Latino Studies at the University of Illinois in Chicago.

She is the author of The Lost Apple: Operation Pedro Pan, Cuban Children and the
Promise of a Better Future (2004), and In the Land of Mirrors: Cuban Exile
Politics in the United States (2001).

As a Cuban refugee, she was a "parolee" from 1961-1965.

Dr. de los Angeles Torres can be reached at [email protected]
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#2
12-26-2010, 11:14 AM
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MiGSTeR
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" Yes we can, but " - Barrack Obama
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#3
12-26-2010, 01:18 PM
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Thecure
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'nuff said
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#4
12-26-2010, 03:43 PM
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Hope
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Thecure View Post


'nuff said
Very true, just like what's been going on with Julian Assange.
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#5
12-27-2010, 03:41 PM
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mikesandy
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We have 2012 to try again. We will prevail.
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#6
12-31-2010, 03:33 PM
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theboys2010
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Obama legacy will not be based on social issues it will be based on the economy always is regardless of the president. Look at President Carter he made some of the greatest peace treaties of our time ex: Egypt and Israel and everyone remember him for the horrible economy, high jobless rates , gas shortages and well the Iran hostage situation as well. But mostly the economy.
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