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DREAM Act Supporters Tell Obama To Quit Campaigning On DREAM Act
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM
(By
Elise Foley,
Huffington Post)
May 20, 2011
Immigration advocacy groups have a
message for President Barack Obama: Stop using the DREAM Act to ask for campaign
money unless you can deliver relief from deportation for undocumented youth.
United We DREAM, a group of young people pushing for the
bill, started a petition last week asking the president to remove discussions of
the bill in campaign literature and fundraising emails unless he is willing to
use his executive power to block deportations for DREAM Act-eligible students.
The DREAM Act would grant legal status to some
undocumented young people who came to the U.S. as children and are now looking
to attend college or join the military.
Although Obama has said repeatedly he supports the DREAM
Act and undocumented students are not the focus of his immigration enforcement
plans, some are nonetheless caught up in a deportation system that removed more
than 390,000 people from the country last year.
On Wednesday, a group of DREAM Act supporters gathered
outside an Obama fundraiser in Boston to protest against the president's
deportation policies.
Vinicius Quirino, 25, a student who is in removal
proceedings after overstaying a tourist visa, chanted, "Pass the DREAM Act now!"
as attendees filtered into the fundraiser. Although Quirino would not be
eligible for the DREAM Act as it is currently written he entered the United
States from Brazil when he was 17, two years beyond the max entrance age under
the bill he said he wants to make sure Obama supporters know the president has
not delivered on his DREAM Act promises.
"We're just showing to people who were supporting him
that he makes promises and he doesn't accomplish anything," he said. "So why are
you supporting him? The students are still in the shit."Quirino has a clean
criminal record, he said, and is attending college. He pays international
student tuition (at a higher rate than American students) and has a tax ID so he
can file taxes to the government. He once tried to join the Air Force, visiting
a recruiting center and passing preliminary tests, before he was told his
immigration status disqualified him.
As students like Quirino face deportation, some in the
immigrant rights activists say Obama is using the DREAM Act as more of a
campaign stunt than an actual legislative push.
"We needed this kind of leadership last year," said
Carlos Saavedra, a national coordinator for United We DREAM. "Now we have very
small chances in Congress, but he still has an ability to secure the lives of
DREAM Act youth."
The group's petition, which has more than 1170
signatures, is part of a broader effort in the immigration advocacy community to
lobby for executive action for DREAM Act-eligible young people.
The bill was reintroduced in the Senate earlier this
month after failing there during last years lame-duck session. Senate Democrats
have said they will hold a vote on the bill possibly paired with immigration
enforcement measures to win GOP votes but there is little hope the DREAM Act
will become law within the next two years.
Some Democrats have said Obama should offer relief in
the meantime in the form of executive action that would block deportation of men
and women under the age of 35 who entered the United States as children, have
clean criminal records and plan to attend college.
The Obama administration has denied it could use its
discretion to stop the deportation of DREAM Act-eligible students.
"I am not going to stand here and say there are whole
categories we will, by executive fiat, exempt from the current immigration
system, as sympathetic as we feel towards them," Department of Homeland Security
Secretary Janet Napolitano said in April. "But I will say that group ... are not
the priority for deportation."
Obama made a similar statement at a March 28 town hall
hosted by Spanish-language network Univision.
"With respect to the notion I can just suspend
deportations through executive order, that's just not the case," he said.
In March, Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.), a vocal
supporter of immigration reform, joined with the Fair Immigration Reform
Movement and other Democrats in Congress to call for executive action on
immigration. The Latino congressman, along with a coalition of immigration
groups, is holding events around the country to pressure Obama to keep his 2008
campaign promises, including the ending of deportation of undocumented students
with clean criminal records.
This is not amnesty, Rep. Mike Honda (D-Calif.) said
at a March event for the campaign. It is simply the right thing to do, and we
must do it now.
Senate Democrats have also called for Obama to block
some deportations. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) and 21 other
Democrats sent a letter to the White House in April asking the president to
block deportations for those who would qualify for the DREAM Act.
As the deportations continue, DREAM Act supporters say
it is disingenuous for Obama to use his support for the bill to drum up support
for his reelection.
"Every time I talk to folks, people are really angry
about it," Saavedra said. "Knowing he can do something about it is frustrating
people the most." |
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