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DAP Forums > DREAM Act > The News Room

Obama on Immigration: Then and Now

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#1
03-17-2010, 10:22 AM
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Quote:
By: Rep. Luis Gutierrez
Congressman
Posted: March 17, 2010 06:56 AM


Three years ago, when I met with Senator Barack Obama in his Chicago office and we contemplated his possible run for the presidency, I was enthusiastic.

On that day, it was hard for me to imagine a time I would have to say no to Barack Obama when he asked me for support. But last week, the Congressional Hispanic Caucus sat down with the president, and he asked us to vote for the health care reform bill -- a bill that denies immigrants the opportunity to purchase health care with their own money. It was one more in a string of disappointments for the Hispanic community, and today, I no longer find myself able to confidently say "yes" when President Obama asks me for his support.

I remember clearly the afternoon I sat down with Obama. In December 2006, he was preparing for a family trip, and the decision to run weighed heavily on his mind. As a progressive member of Congress from Illinois, I was excited and energized by the prospect of my Senator, and my friend, running for President. At the depths of the Bush presidency, the idea of a like-minded, forward-looking leader for our nation seemed almost too good to be true.

Senator Obama and I had been on the same side of many fights, and we had worked together on the issue that is most urgent to me -- comprehensive immigration reform. At that time, it would not have been unusual to see "Obama Marches for Immigration Reform" as a headline on this site. His record matched his rhetoric on this tough --and controversial-- issue.

I was the first Latino Member of Congress to support Senator Obama's candidacy. For quite a while, I was the only one. My Senator had passion when he told me that comprehensive immigration reform was the right thing for America. He had conviction when he said that, as President, he would make it happen. And I believe he spoke genuinely when he said it would be a fundamental priority as President.

After Barack Obama announced his candidacy, I was in the field from coast to coast promoting him. I promised the Latino community that --at last-- we had a candidate who would fight for us and for our causes.

Then, as a candidate, Senator Obama told packed auditoriums, "I think it's time for a President who won't walk away from something as important as comprehensive reform when it becomes politically unpopular."

Then, he said, "I will make it a top priority in my first year as President - not just because we need to secure our borders and get control of who comes into our country. And not just because we have to crack down on employers abusing undocumented immigrants. But because we have to finally bring those 12 million people out of the shadows."

That was then. This is now.

Now, for Latinos in this country --for anyone who cares about fair, comprehensive and humane immigration reform-- Barack Obama has delivered "change." It's been a change for the worse.

Then, candidate Obama said "I am absolutely determined that by the end of the first term of the next president, we should have universal health care in this country."

Now, the President defines "universal" as everyone but immigrants, who are denied even the opportunity to pay into the system, to demonstrate their commitment to a healthier America, to access care anywhere but the emergency room at the greatest expense to us all.

Then, candidate Obama brought thousands of Latino activists to their feet by promising action on comprehensive immigration reform.

Now, President Obama devotes one out of 71 minutes in the State of the Union to immigration.

Then, he said, "We cannot and should not deport 12 million people. That would turn America into something we're not; something we don't want to be."

Now, in his first year alone, the President has deported a record 387,790 immigrants, ordering ICE to remove 13 percent more undocumented immigrants than George Bush did during his last year in office.

Now, as American families continue to be separated, as immigrant workers continue to be abused by employers, as the need for a fair and sensible solution becomes more urgent every day, this administration's action on comprehensive immigration reform can fairly be summarized with one word: nothing.

As a Democrat from Illinois, as a member of Congress who believes in and admires President Obama, it genuinely pains me to say that the facts show that this President has done no more to solve our immigration crisis than George W. Bush.

I'm not the only one to notice. On March 21, tens of thousands of frustrated and impatient people will march on Washington to tell Congress and the President that they have not forgotten the promises that were made to them about immigration reform. They will gather from across the country as human rights activists, as labor activists, as religious activists, as hard-working men and women who deserve fairness on the job. They will come as children who refuse to be separated from their parents and students who demand access to the education they have earned. And they will rally as Latinos who for the most part have supported the Democratic Party and whose power helped turn states like Florida and Colorado and Nevada a bright shade of blue.

They have fought and marched and voted for a system that recognizes the value of immigrants, not one that exploits immigrants for cheap political gain. Our people deserve laws that don't stop at securing our border, but go further to secure our economy, protect our workforce and recognize the proud tradition of immigrants seeking the American Dream.

Some pundits and political analysts will say that now is not the time to promote immigration reform. It's too controversial. It's too difficult. It could cost Democrats some seats in Congress, or distract the President from other initiatives.

But the truth is that our community and its leaders have now spent years waiting patiently at the back of the line of national priorities. We've asked nicely, we've advocated politely. We've turned the other cheek so many times that our heads are spinning.

Waiting, and hoping, doesn't make our borders safe. It doesn't keep families together. It doesn't strengthen our economy. It doesn't bring human beings out of the shadows so they can work harder and pay more taxes.

Only action now by President Obama and this Congress will bring fairness and justice to a system that is fundamentally unfair and unjust.

The need for comprehensive immigration reform is urgent. The proposals exist. The road to reform is clear. Then, as a candidate, Barack Obama said he was ready to travel that road. Now, as President, we need him to hold to that promise and begin the journey today.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-lu..._b_502074.html
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#2
03-17-2010, 11:34 AM
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I agree with Mr. Gutierrez. I think he is absolutely correct about obama. He is an hypocrite.
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#3
03-17-2010, 11:47 AM
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dtrt09
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I posted this yesterday in a previous thread, but it applies exactly to the commentary above.

What do you guys think??

http://www.reporternews.com/news/201...ration-reform/

The fight for immigration reform

They seemed almost embarrassed to acknowledge it. Yet one after another, the same immigrant rights leaders who encouraged us to vote for Barack Obama were telling us that the president had betrayed them — and all of us who believed that he would fix our broken immigration system.

At a Washington news conference last week, they finally took off their politically correct gloves and slapped the president around for failing to keep his promise to fight for comprehensive immigration reform.

It took them a long time. If they had started protesting this way last summer, perhaps they could have pressured the president and Congress to take up this controversial matter long before this year’s midterm elections. Yet now that they are nearly out of time — in the last round — the pro-immigrant leaders finally have come out swinging.
They charged that Obama broke George W. Bush’s deportation record, that the Obama administration “seems proud to out-enforce the Bush administration” and that many things Obama could have improved for undocumented immigrants — even without the consent of Congress — have actually worsened under his administration. They said that even in their wildest nightmares, they never imagined that Obama would deport more than 387,000 immigrants during his first year as president or that on any given day on Obama’s watch, there would be 32,000 immigrants detained in U.S. prisons and awaiting deportation.

“These are the same enforcement practices that we marched against during the Bush administration,” said Angelica Salas, director of the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.

She and other members of the Fair Immigration Reform Movement called on Obama to halt immigration raids and deportations and to fight for a legalization plan for some 11 million undocumented immigrants. They called on all Americans to join them in a pro-immigration march in Washington, D.C., on Sunday, March 21, to pressure the president and Congress to come up with “concrete” immigration reform proposals immediately.

That was on Monday, March 8. Three days later, some of the same leaders actually met with the president and came out of the White House claiming that they were encouraged once again by Obama’s alleged commitment to overhaul our immigration system. Really? On the same day they were meeting with the president, major raids against undocumented immigrants were being conducted in Maryland, as the Obama administration continues to beat Bush on Draconian policies that could be stopped by executive order.

Before meeting with pro-immigrant advocates on March 11, Obama also met with the two senators — Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Charles Schumer, D-N.Y. — who have been procrastinating artfully on the creation of a new “bipartisan” immigration reform bill.

And though the pro-immigrant advocates keep demanding to see a concrete proposal from the president and Congress before their March 21 demonstration, all we’ve gotten has been a statement in which Obama said he would “review” the “promising framework” drafted by the two senators.

Obviously, the Schumer-Graham bill is far from ready — and much farther from being introduced, approved by Congress and signed by Obama this year.

As opposed to the comprehensive immigration reform bill already introduced in the House — by Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill. — the Schumer-Graham bill would attempt to control future illegal immigration by creating a national biometric identification card for all American citizens and legal immigrants — a new issue that by itself could take a year to debate in Congress and perhaps even longer in the courts. There certainly will be many Americans who will argue that a national ID card would allow the government to violate their right to privacy.

Surely Schumer, Graham and Obama are aware that such a measure would totally derail comprehensive immigration reform for months, if not years. Is that their objective? Can they be trusted at this point?

While the president was telling pro-immigrant advocates that he needs to rally the support of some Republicans to pass an immigration reform bill, Graham was issuing a statement saying that he told Obama “in no uncertain terms” that immigration reform “could come to a halt for the year” if Obama persisted on passing health care legislation by using the reconciliation method, which requires a 51-vote majority in the Senate instead of 60 votes. “Using reconciliation to push health care through will make it much harder for Congress to come together on a topic as important as immigration,” Graham noted.

Of course, we all know that Obama is indeed “using reconciliation to push health care through.” In fact, he is spending all his political capital to attain the 216 House votes needed to pass the health care bill this week — the same week when pro-immigrant advocates expect him to come up with “concrete” immigration proposals.

It’s too late — and they know it! Everyone knows that the obstacles to immigration reform are insurmountable right now. Everyone knows that once health care is out of the way, the president and Congress have other huge priorities, such as job creation, waiting in line.

Yet they show up in the last round, while their opponent is still busy with another tough rival, and they expect Obama to fight for health care and immigration at the same time.

They stayed loyal to Obama and the Democratic Party for too long, and now they will go to Washington to pretend that they are the independent leaders they should have been since last summer.

I’m sorry. I wish this were truly a grass-roots effort to condemn Obama and the Democratic leadership in Congress for betraying the immigrants they promised to help. Better yet, I wish it were still possible to pressure Democrats to “do the right thing” for immigrants this year. But this is all a farce.

The White House meetings with senators and advocates and even the demonstration on Sunday — it’s all a show, make-believe, so that both the back-stabbing politicians and the betrayed pro-immigrant leaders can pretend that at least they tried.

To find out more about Miguel Perez, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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#4
03-17-2010, 08:43 PM
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Lets all be patient. Obama's admin has a lot on the table because of the downturn in the economy and the jobs. It looks a bill will out soon in the next month or so.
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#5
03-17-2010, 10:49 PM
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I didn't read the OP post..or the ones that were long after that.. Although I am frustrated about my status situation, I can't say Obama is a hypocrite. Doesn't he only have 1/3 of the power anyway. He may want things to change. But he is ONLY one person. He DOES need support from others.
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#6
03-18-2010, 03:30 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by DA User View Post
Lets all be patient. Obama's admin has a lot on the table because of the downturn in the economy and the jobs. It looks a bill will out soon in the next month or so.
Quote:
Originally Posted by hef107 View Post
...Although I am frustrated about my status situation, I can't say Obama is a hypocrite. Doesn't he only have 1/3 of the power anyway. He may want things to change. But he is ONLY one person. He DOES need support from others.

I agree, we should wait just a little bit longer before we start bashing Obama and his lack of action. Many people are frustrated that he only spoke a sentence about immigration during his State of the Union address, at least he mentioned it! He's been fighting for health care reform and it looks like he might succeed. Cut the man some slack.
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