Immigration Reform

Immigration Reform

The last time Congress updated our legal immigration system was November 1990, one month before the World Wide Web went online. We are long overdue for comprehensive immigration reform.

Through immigration reform, we can provide noncitizens with a system of justice that provides due process of law and a meaningful opportunity to be heard. Because it can be a contentious and wide-ranging issue, we aim to provide advocates with facts and work to move bipartisan solutions forward. Read more about topics like legalization for undocumented immigrants and border security below.

Push Still Strong for Immigration Reform in Early Obama Administration

Push Still Strong for Immigration Reform in Early Obama Administration

Today, Barack Obama stepped into the Oval Office on his first full day in the White House as President of the United States and met with economic advisors to start "making early progress on the change he promised."  In the spirit of both economic recovery and social change, immigration should be addressed in President Obama's early conversations.  Latinos are demanding it ought to, experts and advocates are confident it will. Read More

A Secretary of Labor Who’ll Work for All Workers

A Secretary of Labor Who’ll Work for All Workers

Working people finally have a fighter in their corner, with Hilda Solis almost certain to be confirmed as the next Secretary of Labor. The California Congresswoman has been a loyal champion for working families, fighting for the rights, interest, and safety of all workers-both immigrant and native-born.  Solis has, as Marie Cocco puts it, "a record of unstinting loyalty to those who work and want to work, and who wish to receive in exchange a decent wage and a measure of dignity." As the child of immigrants and the first to attend college in her family, she knows how important it is that everyone who works hard in America has the opportunity to achieve the American Dream.  She understands that all workers make hard choices and tremendous sacrifices in order to support their families and build a better future and that it's the interests and lives of these working people that should be at the heart of any reform of our immigration laws. Read More

Presidential Leaders Want Comprehensive Immigration Reform on Front Burner

Presidential Leaders Want Comprehensive Immigration Reform on Front Burner

President Bush counted immigration reform as one of his major regrets this week when cautioning the GOP not to be perceived as so "anti-somebody." While Bush's promise of comprehensive immigration reform took a back seat to the Iraq War back in 2001, current headlines suggest Obama's immigration reform campaign pledge is similarly taking a backseat to our economic woes. But in a step toward more immediate immigration reform, President-Elect Barack Obama met with Mexican President Felipe Calderon yesterday for lunch at the Mexican Cultural Institute in Washington, D.C., to discuss, among other things, comprehensive immigration reform as a priority. Read More

Religious, Labor, Latino, and Immigrant Leaders Optimistic, Renew Call for Immigration Reform

Religious, Labor, Latino, and Immigrant Leaders Optimistic, Renew Call for Immigration Reform

Yesterday a group of key leaders renewed the call for immigration reform in 2009 and stressed that immigration reform is a critical piece of our economic recovery.  On a conference call hosted by the National Immigration Forum, all speakers made the point that immigration reform is indeed possible during this Congress, and that the new Administration as well as Congressional leaders have already shown signs that they are ready to move forward. Read More

Bush Regrets Not Pushing for Immigration Reform

Bush Regrets Not Pushing for Immigration Reform

This week, in an interview with Cal Thomas of the Washington Times, George W. Bush admitted that he regretted concentrating so much on Social Security and not pushing for immigration reform after his '04 reelection: Q: And biggest do-over? Knowing everything you know now, what would you have done over again? THE PRESIDENT: I probably, in retrospect, should have pushed immigration reform right after the ´04 election and not Social Security reform. Read More

Immigration Battle Rages on at State and Local Levels

Immigration Battle Rages on at State and Local Levels

It's not just Congress that's getting back to work.  State legislators are also returning to state capitals for another year of lawmaking.  This year immigration is likely to be a prominent issue, just as it has been in the past. According to the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL), the number of immigration-related bills introduced in state legislatures has grown exponentially in recent years as the national debate over immigration reform has heated up.  In 2005, 300 bills were introduced and 38 laws were enacted.  In 2006, activity doubled: 570 bills were introduced and 84 laws were enacted.  In 2007, activity tripled: 1,562 bills were introduced and 240 laws were enacted.  In 2008, 1,305 bills were introduced in 45 states, and 205 laws and resolutions were enacted in 41 states. Read More

The GOP’s New Year Resolution on Immigration

The GOP’s New Year Resolution on Immigration

By any measurement the GOP lost more than an election this year. Many Republican candidates who incorporated immigrant-bashing and nativism into their platforms lost sight of the kind of country the U.S. has become and, in doing so, caused the GOP to experience a defeat the likes of which they have not seen in years. The Arizona Republic laid out the GOP's challenge ahead: For only the second time since 1979, they control neither the White House nor a chamber of Congress...More troubling for the GOP: They have been pushed back to a regional base in the South and in the depopulating plains. Congressional losses in 2008 all but wiped out Republican House representation in the Northeast. Republican presidential candidates have not been competitive in the Pacific Rim of California, Oregon and Washington for two decades. Once-staunchly GOP Virginia and Indiana went to Obama. Read More

Task Force Calls for Federal Immigrant Integration Effort

Task Force Calls for Federal Immigrant Integration Effort

While some fear that demographic shifts threaten American identity, yet another piece of research has come out showing that today's immigrants want to and are integrating into American society just like generations of immigrants before them. After more than two years of collaboration and initiatives among 20 federal agencies and a variety of stakeholders, the Task Force on New Americans delivered a report this past Monday.  The Task Force was assembled in 2006 with a call to "strengthen the efforts of the Department of Homeland Security and federal, state, and local agencies to help legal immigrants embrace the common core of American civic culture, learn our common language, and fully become Americans."  The Task Force's recommendations are based in the belief that immigrants can and do integrate into U.S. society and that integration is also a federal responsibility. Read More

Immigration May Make or Break NY Senate Seat Contenders

Immigration May Make or Break NY Senate Seat Contenders

Caroline Kennedy's interest in taking over Hillary Clinton's U.S. Senate seat for the state of New York is no secret.  Her policy positions have been less obvious.  However, this past weekend she began revealing "hints" of a platform-including immigration. On Saturday, Ms. Kennedy's spokesman provided written answers to 15 questions posed by The New York Times.  On the topic of immigration, Ms. Kennedy shares the views of her uncle, Senator Edward Kennedy-supporting a path to citizenship for the undocumented.  In fact, Kennedy's positions on immigration also line up pretty well with those of her potential predecessor, Hillary Clinton herself.  According to Ms. Kennedy's aide: Read More

2,000 Approved Naturalization Applicants Blocked from Voting

2,000 Approved Naturalization Applicants Blocked from Voting

Red tape and a tightfisted judge blocked nearly 2,000 people who should've been able to vote this past Election Day from receiving their naturalization oath in time to register for November's general election.  Lawful permanent residents with approved naturalization applications must take the oath of allegiance to become a U.S. citizen. According to a new government report and immigration analysts, federal judges in some parts of the U.S. may be refusing USCIS (U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services) requests for oath ceremonies and delaying the swearing-in of new citizens. Some USCIS district offices administer naturalization oaths themselves. But in a few districts-including New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and Detroit-only federal district courts have power to so and are then reimbursed by USCIS for all oath ceremonies they perform. Los Angeles itself received $2.4 million for the 169,799 oaths it administered in 2008. According to the Washington Post, the ombudsman for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Michael Dougherty, stated: Read More

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