Tag Archives: reform

Immigration reform in spotlight again across US

By LAURA WIDES-MUNOZ Associated Press

MIAMI (AP) _ Immigrants and their allies will march this weekend on Taylorville, Ill., in time for the annual chili fest. They’ll take a break from harvesting spuds to demonstrate in Boise, Idaho, and they’ll hold candles until dawn along the banks of Lake Hollingsworth near Orlando, Fla.

In more than 150 cities around the country, they will gather to remind the nation that despite the feuds in Congress over the debt ceiling and health care _ despite the government shutdown _ they are still here and still demanding immigration reform.

Organizers are pitching Saturday as a “National Day for Dignity and Respect” and the beginning of an “escalation to bring immigration reform across the finish line this year.”  Their weekend is the prelude to a rally and free concert Tuesday on the National Mall in Washington, where they hope to draw tens of thousands.

There also will be Texas rallies in Houston, San Antonio Dallas, Austin and Corpus Christi.

The chances they get anything through Congress before the year’s end, though, are splinter thin. If House Republicans are willing to make a deal on anything with Democrats, it’s likely to be about the budget, not immigration.

But Tampa-based activist Felipe Sousa-Rodriguez said Saturday’s events are as much about sending a message to average Americans and to the immigrants themselves as they are about spurring action in Congress.

“It’s about seeing us in our communities, not just as a number: 11 million undocumented,” he said. “And it’s about immigrants seeing that there are other immigrants out there, and that we are active members of our democracy,” he added. “A lot of people feel isolated, and when you see all these marchers, that gives you hope and the energy to join them.”

Sousa-Rodriguez knows about feeling isolated. He thought his situation was unique until the 2006 pro-immigrant marches, when he realized thousands of other immigrant youths were, like him, in the country illegally.

Sousa-Rodriguez, who works with the national LGBT grassroots group GetEQUAL, said Saturday’s mobilization is also about showing the support the immigrant movement has earned from religious leaders, labor and civil rights organizations and the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.

The Alliance for Citizenship, a broad national coalition of organizations that includes the AFL-CIO, the ACLU, the YWCA and the Southern Poverty Law Center, is driving the mobilization.

In Washington, the shutdown aside, House Democrats unveiled an immigration bill Wednesday proposing an extended path to citizenship for the 11 million immigrants illegally present, along with heightened border security. But immigration reform has been on the backburner since before the budget standoff. Many rank-and-file in the House’s Republican majority are disinclined to deal with the contentious issue of whether those in country without proper papers should be given such a path.

Tellingly, the organizers who came up with “Day of Dignity and Respect” found a somewhat vague, yet much more inclusive, name for the mobilization than anything linked to passage of a specific bill.

Saturday’s biggest rallies will likely be in the usual places, across California, in Chicago, Arizona and New York. In Los Angeles, organizers predict about 20,000 will march along the Hollywood Walk of Fame. In New York, they’ll cross the Brooklyn Bridge. But more than 100 events will take place in towns and cities with far less visible immigrant communities.

In Boise, activist Fernando Mejia is organizing farm workers who will hold their mobilization Sunday because potato harvesting season is starting up anew and onion crops need to be picked into the weekend.

In Lakeland, Florida, midway between Tampa and Orlando, immigrants and their supporters will hold an overnight prayer vigil from 8 p.m. till 10:00 a.m. along the lake.

Professor Tom Shields, lecturer at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell said staging events in small towns across the country sends a message that immigration is not just an inside the Beltway concern. “It’s not just in California and Texas. You have these others states that are having this experience…. this population is living right next door to us.”

Shields likened the potential impact of the marches to the early March 2010 immigration demonstrations in Washington that drew thousands of youths just as lawmakers were on the cusp of approving the nation’s historic health care overhaul.

“That same day, 100 protesters against the Affordable Care Act stood outside the Capitol. And of course, the next day the press led with the Affordable Care Act,” he said. “But to the students who went down there, it felt like a galvanizing moment. They had not seen so many people gathered before. They felt like their personal struggles were now connected to larger issues.”

The result: more volunteers, more media attention back home and last but not least, more funding.

That’s not to say the weekend mobilizations don’t have specific targets.

In Arizona, activists are calling out Gov. Jan Brewer. She recently issued executive orders to bar immigrants who have received deferred action _ those granted temporary federal permission to live and work in the U.S. _ from getting drivers licenses.

In Illinois, immigrants will march 30 miles to the city of Taylorville _ in time for that heartland town’s annual Chili fest. Their goal: to get the attention of U.S. Rep. Rodney Davis, a Republican from Taylorville who initially seemed open to comprehensive reform with a path to citizenship.

In Arkansas, activists are targeting U.S. Rep. Steve Womack, a conservative Republican who has opposed a path to citizenship for those in the country illegally, as well as their U.S.-born children. Organizers plan to march on his hometown of Rogers, where he was once mayor. Coordinator Mireya Reith, also a member of the State Board of Education, noted Arkansas is among the top five states with the fastest-growing immigrant population but that many eligible immigrants don’t become citizens, or if they do, they don’t vote.

She said her organization has been working to double the Latino and Asian vote in the state, and she views Saturday as a prime occasion for outreach, especially with the 2014 election a year away.

Whether Congress is willing to act, she says she’s already seen a change on the ground in Rogers.

Case in point: “Back when Wolmak was mayor, we never would have been able to do this,” she said.

Senate shoots down gun reform legislation

Gun reform supporters stand and rally together.
Gun reform supporters stand and rally together.

Myra Griffin
The Houston Sun

The fight for stricter gun laws on Capitol Hill is proving to be a steep uphill battle and the Obama administration has yet to see a victory. Gun rallies are taking place all over the country in hopes to make a social change with the violence that has been associated lately with guns.

Recently the Senate shut down the plan to extend background checks to online and gun-show sales. The vote tallied 54 to 56 leaving the bill six votes short of the 60 votes needed for it to pass. The proposal to ban rapid firing assault weapons failed in the Senate as well.

Americans are praying for “gunsense” as the death toll is rising and the families of the slain are crying out for justice and help. Congresswoman Sheila Jackson Lee has taken to the fight of gun law reform and wants the nation to see what gun violence has done to America, families and children.

“I think it’s intolerable that we don’t have an up or down vote,” said Congresswoman Lee as she rallied for some type of vote to be rendered earlier in April.

The types of guns that the public should possess gives way to the contrition that is making the debate a fiery one, being that assault rifles are under immense scrutiny.

“We need a vote to eliminate assault weapons as well as registration standards,” said Constable Walker. “Only law enforcement need assault weapons.”

Constable May Walker of Precinct 7 approves of universal background checks and anti- gun trafficking law.

The ideology of right and wrong is one of the biggest factors in the gun reform debate as the nation’s conscious feels it is wrong when children are murdered yet it is right that Americans should hold their rights of bearing arms in tact. Congresswoman Lee’s stance is regulation as she reminds the public of the victims of gun violence.

America is the most “gunned” country in the world. In 2011 there were 89 guns for every 100 Americans which would make one presume America would be a safer country yet it’s not.

Legislators urged by their constituents are pushing for sensible gun legislation that will ban assault weapons; diminish the use of multiple round clips and the closing of the gun show loopholes. With the recent tragedies of the shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newton, Connecticut, the theater massacre in Aurora, Colorado and statistics like 500 homicides linked to gun violence on the streets of Chicago in 2012, the American public have had lit fires that are burning under President Obama to make some type of reform with firearms.

With all the push for reform there are just as many if not more people who do not feel the same sentiment. The urgency for change is meeting opposition from legislators and organizations such as The National Rifle Association (NRA). The NRA is fighting with all the fire power they have to keep the gun laws as is. In a statement released earlier in April the NRA said, that the amendment “would have criminalized certain private transfers of firearms between honest citizens, requiring lifelong friends, neighbors and some family members to get federal government permission to exercise a fundamental right or face prosecution.”

The battle is far from over as politicians on both sides of the issue are not going to back down. The issue filibustered in the Senate and made many angry while causing the public to rally for a decision.

April 17, 2013 the Senate shot down the President’s gun legislation leaving a large majority of the country bitter and looking for a new direction.