January 2008 U.S. Immigrant Alert! Newsletter
January 2008 U.S.
Immigrant Alert! Newsletter Please read the Newsletter, download URL:
http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Jan08.pdf Immigrant Rights Movements for 2008 In This Issue: 1) Call to Immigrant Rights Actions 2008
2008 Analysis: Immigrant Congressional Legislation, Presidential Race The second session of the 110th Congress begins this week, when the House convenes. The Senate will be back next week. This is going to be an ugly year for immigrants, as Republican presidential candidates compete with each other to show that they are tougher on immigrants than the next guy, and Congressional candidates try to make immigration a wedge issue. But before we get into that, let’s review where we left off.
Congress Wraps Government Operating Funds into Giant Omnibus Package For the most part, the immigration enforcement measures favored by immigration restrictionists were kept off the final bill. One exception was an amendment related to public housing. This amendment restricts eligibility for homeownership assistance funds to U.S. citizens or to immigrants who are lawfully present and authorized to work. According to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the restriction may go beyond barring undocumented immigrants, but may also prevent legal immigrants who are elderly or have disabilities (and therefore do not have work authorization) from receiving this assistance. Efforts to obtain relief for businesses that rely on certain temporary workers were also thwarted, including a provision to continue exempting returning H-2B workers (seasonal, non-agriculture laborers) from the annual cap. An increase in visas for the H-1B program was also set aside. With various factions pushing for changes to the immigration laws—whether to open them up for businesses, tighten labor standards for workers, protect the undocumented, or increase restrictions on immigrants—the final outcome was that almost everyone went home empty-handed. There was a provision in the Defense Department Authorization bill (signed in December) that would authorize admission of up to 5,000 Iraqis per year as “special immigrants.” This provision applies to persons who believe they are in danger as a result of aiding the U.S. They do not necessarily have to have fled Iraq; they may be processed inside that country. The provision also streamlines the process for admission of other Iraqi refugees and provides for better coordination of efforts to resolve the growing refugee crisis generated by the war.
The Presidential Race For that he got the endorsement of the Minuteman border vigilante group. Congressman Tom Tancredo (R-CO), meanwhile, discovered that the populist anti-immigrant wave he rode in to the Presidential race wouldn’t lift his surfboard off the sand. In Iowa, where immigration was a hot topic in candidate forums, he polled a consistent two percent. On December 20th Tancredo announced that he was dropping out of the race and endorsing former Massachusetts Governor Mitt “get out of the country when you finish mowing my lawn” Romney. As Dana Milbank of the Washington Post amusingly noted, Tancredo made his announcement in a hotel where, just steps away, there was a “South of the Border” lunch special being served. Tancredo dropped out in advance of the Iowa caucuses and endorsed Romney in part because Mike Huckabee, who Tancredo said had an “abysmal” record of “inviting” undocumented immigrants, was surging in the polls. After getting Tancredo’s blessings, Romney promptly lost to Huckabee in Iowa. He then went on to New Hampshire and…lost again. To John McCain. The guy who co-sponsored the comprehensive reform bill that all the candidates are now distancing themselves from. Ouch! However, as Romney is fond of telling us, he did win in Wyoming, picking up eight of the 1,191 delegates he will need to win the nomination. The results of these early returns are repeating a pattern we have seen in the Congressional elections in 2006 and local elections in 2007. A candidate’s focus on immigration enforcement may please a segment of the electorate, but that is not necessarily good enough to actually win an election where voters with a variety of concerns come out to the polls. For an analysis of the elections of November 2007.
Shuler Bill Gains Sponsors To read more, please go to the newsletter, download URL: Announcing
New On-Line Tools for Congressional Advocacy and Community Activism! National Immigrant Solidarity Network, along with ActionLA Coalition and Activist Design Studio, are launching a breakthrough on-line activism tools: e-Activism.org and ActivistVideo.org Beta version!
e-Activism.org: a free open-membership social networking site for the community activists for on-line activism with different tools to create your campaigns, useful tools for the policy research and on-line policy advocacy tools to contact the elected officials.
ActivistVideo.org: a free video-sharing site for activist communities! Can create your own campaign pages to upload related videos!
Official Launch Date: Spring, 2008 Please visit our Beta version TODAY!
Several Great Immigrant Rights Videos from ActivistVideo.org
T Don Hutto - America's Family Prison (link to the video: http://www.activistvideo.org/views.asp?id=155)
11/11 2007 Border Patrol agents violently Attacks No Borders Camp (link to the video: http://www.activistvideo.org/views.asp?id=21)
Useful Immigrant Resources on Detention and Deportation
Tracking
ICE's Enforcement Agenda - From
Raids to Deportation-A Community Resource Kit
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