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John Gehring

John Gehring

Posted: January 12, 2010 11:24 AM

While attention is focused on final negotiations over health-care legislation, Catholic bishops have signaled they will play a leading role in pushing for comprehensive immigration reform this year by using the power of their pulpits and bipartisan political influence on Capitol Hill. Last week, bishops hosted a briefing to outline plans for persuading the public and wavering members of Congress that fixing a broken immigration system is a moral and practical priority.

Bishop John C. Wester of Salt Lake City and Bishop Howard Hubbard of Albany, New York -- respective chairmen of the US bishops' committees on migration and international policy -- announced that over a million postcards touting the need for immigration reform have been ordered by dioceses and parishes across the country. Cards will be sent to congressional offices. The effort is one component of a Justice for Immigrants campaign designed to educate the public about Catholic teaching on immigration and to spur political will for humane immigration reform that would bring an estimated 12 million undocumented immigrants out of the shadows.

According to Bishop Wester:


It is our view that the American public, including Catholic and other faith communities, want a humane and comprehensive solution to the problems which beset our immigration system, and they want Congress to address this issue. We remain committed to moving immigration reform as soon as possible.

Kevin Appleby, director of migration policy and public affairs for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said the conference is hiring state organizers in strategic areas like Ohio, Pennsylvania and Indiana, where there is a sizable Catholic population and members of congress whose votes will be critical to passing reform. In the House, over 90 co-sponsors have signed on to a comprehensive reform bill introduced last month by Rep. Luis V. Gutierrez of Illinois. Sen. Charles Schumer and Sen. Lindsey Graham are working to draft legislation in the Senate. "We are in this to win and hope to influence Congress and the Administration to do the right thing," Appleby said.

While ideologues and pandering politicians often simplify this complex issue, the Catholic Church brings a global perspective that recognizes how U.S. trade policies, poverty in sending countries and development all influence migration. "The first principle of the U.S. bishops with regard to immigration is that migrants have the right not to migrate---in other words to be able to find work in their own home countries so they can support their families with dignity," Bishop Hubbard said. "Migration should be driven by choice, not necessity. From the Catholic perspective, integral human development in poor countries is the most humane solution to this challenge."

How that message will resonate at a time of economic hardship and rising anti-immigrant backlash is unclear. But the Catholic vision for a humane immigration system is not only rooted in compelling appeals to justice and morality. Practical arguments are also persuasive. Over the last two decades, the federal government has poured billions into beefing up security along the U.S.-Mexican border. Migrants have responded by finding new and more dangerous routes into the U.S. through the Arizona desert. There is no wall high or long enough to deter the dreams of those seeking a better life. Stopping migration's socioeconomic engine requires more than tough talk from finger-wagging politicians or the cowboy antics of local sheriffs. It requires a systematic response that rejects false choices. We can protect our borders and uphold human dignity.

While groups like NumbersUSA perpetuate pernicious myths about immigrants, the faith community is mobilized like never before to push for comprehensive reform that includes an earned path to citizenship, strong worker protections and policies that keep families from being torn apart in raids. Catholic in Alliance for the Common Good, Faith in Public Life, Sojourners and PICO National Network all played a significant role in framing health care reform as an urgent moral issue. We will be active again with media campaigns, grassroots organizing, prayer vigils and strategic advocacy in key states on this issue that strikes at the heart of our religious commitment to welcome the stranger. For politicians who pride themselves on standing up for families and defending American values, their test is coming soon.

 
While attention is focused on final negotiations over health-care legislation, Catholic bishops have signaled they will play a leading role in pushing for comprehensive immigration reform this year by...
While attention is focused on final negotiations over health-care legislation, Catholic bishops have signaled they will play a leading role in pushing for comprehensive immigration reform this year by...
 
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leonel
MA, Pol.Sci.; MA, Ed.; JD. Veteran.
12:06 AM on 01/13/2010
COMPREHENS­IVE REFORM IS NOT POSSIBLE

People who go back and forth across the Mexican border, like I do, realize that it is unrealisti­c to believe in "comprehen­sive immigratio­n reform." There are supposedly 10 million who have not gotten legal status to be here and there are probably another 200 million who would also like to immigrate here. There will continue to be millions of unemployed persons who would like to move here. Many will not even qualify who are here, will not even apply for legal status, and many more will try to come. Granting permits or visas to a few million will not solve the problem, even if the law could be passed.

The immigratio­n question is a world-wide problem. It will be around for many years if not centuries. Poor immigrants need to be treated with compassion but it is not possible to come up with a comprehens­ive answer to so much poverty.

Wiser and cooler heads are likely to prevail and Democratic leaders will not create needless controvers­ies in Congress when there is no prospect of immediate success. Only Republican­s would benefit from the controvers­y and the public would be more confused.

What is needed is to treat them as economic refugees who come here illegally out of desperatio­n. To decriminal­ize drugs. To work closer with Mexico and other countries and focus on terrorism and crime.

That is what the public prefers.
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HUFFPOST PUNDIT
ReedYoung
global mean land-ocean temperature 1880 to present
10:46 PM on 01/12/2010
They're right this time, but they still don't have the right to be political advocates AND tax-exempt­. Pick one or the other.

http://www­.thepetiti­onsite.com­/1/tax-pol­itical-chu­rches
06:00 PM on 01/12/2010
This of course, is not about the religion of most immigrants­. The bishops should be able to get this done, now that they are part of the legislativ­e branch of the government of the United States of America.