Immigration Reform

Immigration Reform

Candidate for RNC Chair Chip Saltsman Stirs Controversy with “Star Spanglish Banner”

Candidate for RNC Chair Chip Saltsman Stirs Controversy with “Star Spanglish Banner”

At a time when the GOP should be warming up to key Latino and immigrant voting blocs, Chip Saltsman-candidate for the next chair of the Republican National Committee (RNC)-chose to ring in the New Year with a song called "The Star Spanglish Banner."  Saltsman, who is also known as the former head of the Tennessee Republican Party who managed the Mike Huckabee campaign, included the song on his controversial holiday CD that he sent to RNC members as a Christmas gift. The story-which NDN's Melissa Merz officially broke-exposes yet another example of the xenophobic and bigoted rhetoric put forth by reckless public figures that has fueled rising hate crimes and violence against Latinos.  Today's Huffington Post's head-lining article, "Star Spanglish Banner: RNC Candidate Chip Saltsman Causes Immigration Stir," described the song as: Read More

CIS Ignores the Facts: Immigration Important Concern for Latino Voters

CIS Ignores the Facts: Immigration Important Concern for Latino Voters

The Center for Immigration Studies tries to snatch anti-immigrant victory from the jaws of electoral defeat in a new report about Latino voters in the 2008 election.   According to the report, the widespread perception among Latinos that the Republican Party is hostile to immigrants played no appreciable role in their decision about whether to vote Democratic or Republican last November. Read More

Latino Experts Look Beyond Legalization and Citizenship

Latino Experts Look Beyond Legalization and Citizenship

Former Housing Secretary Henry Cisneros and several other leading Latino experts met at the Center for American Progress Monday to discuss Latinos’ role in shaping America’s future. Panelists such as Sarita Brown of Excelencia in Education and Janet Murguia of NCLR joined Cisneros in affirming that without vast improvements to the Latino community’s economic and educational status, the United States will not advance as a global competitor in the future. Read More

Senators Lay Out 2009 Priorities at Progressive Media Summit

Senators Lay Out 2009 Priorities at Progressive Media Summit

Last week at the 2009 Senate Democratic Progressive Media Summit Democratic Senators laid out priorities for 2009. Senator Majority Leader Harry Reid spoke with great force about the need to enact immigration reform and his intention to do so in the coming year. While he prefaced his comments by stating that immigration is the issue that garners the most "threats" against him, he said comprehensive immigration reform is important to our country. While he said it must include protecting our borders, a guest worker program, and employer sanctions; he also said we must bring the "10 million out of the shadows" and described a program that would put them in a line for citizenship where they would pay penalties and fines and get right with the law. Read More

Gov. Paterson Stuns Immigrant Community With Gillibrand Senate Pick

Gov. Paterson Stuns Immigrant Community With Gillibrand Senate Pick

The State of New York has, throughout its history, been both a haven and a hotbed for immigrants and diversity.  That's why New York State Governor David Paterson's decision to pick Rep. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-NY) to replace Hillary Rodham Clinton as U.S. Senator raises deep concern among immigrants and advocates in the state and across the country. Read More

Hundreds March Around Country March for Immigration Reform

Hundreds March Around Country March for Immigration Reform

Yesterday groups of immigrants, community members, faith leaders and advocates gathered around the country to march and call upon the new Obama Administration to move forward with immigration reform including a path to citizenship for the approximately 12 million undocumented immigrants living in the U.S.  Diverse groups of immigrants and their supporters in Washington, DC, San Francisco, Fresno, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston, New York, Houston, Santa Maria, and Milwaukee called for an end to heavy-handed enforcement tactics that cost millions of dollars and are harmful to American communities. Read More

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

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