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Rep. Luis Gutierrez

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The Stolen Dreams Act

Posted: 04/ 2/2012 5:05 pm

Word is leaking from the Senate that Republicans, facing stiff and well-deserved opposition from most Hispanic voters, are crafting a bill similar to but not nearly as good as the DREAM Act, a bill to legalize the immigration status of young people who grew up in the United States but are currently undocumented immigrants.

Reports indicate that a proposal backed by Senator Marco Rubio of Florida, who opposes the DREAM Act, would allow certain young people to eventually earn legal status by attending certain four-year colleges or serving in the U.S. military. The proposal would bar these young people raised in the United States from ever becoming citizens. Similar restrictive or watered down proposals are said to be coming from Sens. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas and Jon Kyl of Arizona (both of whom have supported the DREAM Act before now opposing it). Let's call them collectively the 'Stolen Dreams' Act.

This is a very dangerous game these Republican senators are playing with the lives of young people. With zero chance of such a proposal passing the Republican-controlled House, they are hoping to play politics with the immigration issue long enough to soften the Republican Party's image with Latino and immigrant voters, which, to be blunt, stinks. It is the equivalent of a batter protecting the plate in baseball, sending off foul tips to extend his time at the plate, but without actually swinging or making a serious attempt to get on base.

And it is a foul tip indeed. Unlike his parents and practically everyone else who has emigrated from Cuba, Senator Rubio feels the current cohort of immigrants in America should never be considered fully American. Even for infants brought to America by their parents and now fully Americanized, they can never be fully considered citizens and taxpayers if Senator Rubio has his way. It represents a sea change in American history; taking citizenship off of the table for a group of people for whom America is their only home.

Why? Because Senator Rubio and other Republicans fear legal immigration. Despite all the rhetoric out of one side of their mouths that they "only oppose the illegal kind" of immigration, the main argument they speak out of the other side of their mouth against citizenship is that citizens can sponsor close family members for visas to come legally.

Fox TV personality Lou Dobbs, during his segment on The O'Reilly Factor on March 23, spelled it out:

The big negative is -- and this is one of the things Senator Rubio has said -- it introduces chain migration. That is, you can bring family members into the line, that is, a path to legalization... Right now they could start bringing in their immediate families and then, depending on which version of the DREAM Act you look at, they could bring in their parents, you could bring in extended family members.

The Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee agrees that citizenship and legal immigration are the perils of the DREAM Act. In an op-ed posted at Fox News.com, the gatekeeper to House Republicans when it comes to immigration wrote:

While DREAM Act supporters claim that it would only benefit children, they skip over the fact that it actually rewards the very illegal immigrant parents who knowingly violated our laws. Once their children become U.S. citizens, they can petition for their illegal immigrant parents and adult siblings to be legalized, who will then bring in others in an endless chain.

This is why Senator Rubio has said, "I think that one of the debates that we need to begin to have is a difference between citizenship and legalization." He told Fox News personality Juan Williams that he fears the DREAM Act would bring three or four million new people to the U.S.

The facts blow this argument out of the water. Most immigrants who become citizens sponsor one other close family member for legal immigration over their lifetimes (the average is 1.2 per immigrant), but many of the young people who could be eligible for the DREAM Act already live in families that are A) already here; and B) where some in the family are citizens or here legally and some are not. Even under rosy projections, any person legalized under the version of the DREAM Act that passed the House in 2010, for example, would not be able to get a family member a visa for at least a decade or two. Factor in the waiting times for most visas and immigration policies that bar almost all of those already living here illegally from getting legal, even if their child or sibling (or even a spouse) somehow becomes a citizen, and you see this is a bright red herring. It is a fictitious argument, but one embraced by Senator Rubio, Rep. Smith, and Lou Dobbs.

Senator Rubio is so convinced that his party is opposed to fully integrating immigrants into the fabric of America, he will not even bother to ask them to support it. He jumps right to the no-citizenship option. He knows he cannot gather support for fully including these young people in our country given the posture of most candidates and office holders. And raising the question could further expose and embarrass Republicans when the vote in November hinges on how (and how many) eligible Latinos vote.

Young people with no criminal record, who have grown up in the United States, are without papers through no fault of their own -- even the ones who embrace and pay for higher education or serve our country in the military -- being put on a lengthy journey to citizenship is toxic to the leaders of the Republican Party. The presidential candidates and all the key committee chairmen favor an approach closer to Arizona's racial profiling law. They want their approach to immigration to spark a mass exodus of more than 11 million people, even though most have lived here for more than a decade. It is ludicrous, but sadly true.

It is a tragic commentary on the GOP and how far it has leapt over the anti-immigration cliff. Sen. Rubio knows that Ronald Reagan would be drummed out of his own GOP because of his support for legal immigration and citizenship for long-time residents. Senators John McCain, Jon Kyl, Kay Bailey Hutchison, and Orrin Hatch, among others, who once led GOP efforts to craft bipartisan solutions to make citizens and taxpayers out of long-time residents, are all cowering from the sign waving bullies and talk-show hosts in their own party. And let's be clear, anti-immigration policies and anti-immigrant rhetoric adopted by some leaders in Senator Rubio's party aren't just liabilities with Latino voters, they are liabilities will all voters.

You are either for maintaining America's tradition of incorporating generations of immigrant families into America through a controlled and orderly process or you are not. You are either for getting immigration under control by making legality and visas an option for immigrants or you are not. You are either for making sure we have fair laws evenly enforced so that members of our society share the same rights and responsibilities as citizens and taxpayers or you are not. And you either think the type of people who are immigrants today can and will become full partners in our shared destiny -- just as our forefathers and mothers did when people doubted them -- or you do not. There has always been a small number of Americans opposed to incorporating immigrants fully into society and they have always been wrong.

 

Follow Rep. Luis Gutierrez on Twitter: www.twitter.com/LuisGutierrez

Word is leaking from the Senate that Republicans, facing stiff and well-deserved opposition from most Hispanic voters, are crafting a bill similar to but not nearly as good as the DREAM Act, a bill to...
Word is leaking from the Senate that Republicans, facing stiff and well-deserved opposition from most Hispanic voters, are crafting a bill similar to but not nearly as good as the DREAM Act, a bill to...
 
 
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09:51 PM on 04/08/2012
ILLEGAL ALIENS no matter how they got here, where they come from, what language they speak, what color they are, how smart they are, which university they ILLEGALLY go to, who they work for, who they sleep with, who they are related to, or how many good deeds they do - need to go back to their own countries and fight for the DREAM act there.
We need to send our own CITIZENS and LEGAL immigrants to college.
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Snake1994
Snakebite!
05:52 PM on 04/05/2012
Rep. Gutierrez and people like him just want to give all illegals amnesty. That's their agenda. That's what they call immigration reform. I call it breaking the law and being rewarded for it. We don't need reform, we need to secure the border so this can never happen again, and deport as many as we possibly can, even though they say it can't be done. It can be done! If they can deport 3,000 in one day, they can deport 20 million. They know where they are. Just think of all the votes these politicians will get if they grant them amnesty. Isn't that what it's all about?
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CelticMajic
The answer lies in each of us individually
02:24 PM on 04/05/2012
Representative Gutierrez, once again you knowingly conflate illegal immigration with legal immigration. Please, please try to keep them separate. It is not real hard and has to do with upholding the law. You remember the law don't you, it was what you swore to uphold upon taking office.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
James Haun
the first 374 fans are always the hardest
01:14 PM on 04/05/2012
"You are either for maintaining America's tradition of incorporating generations of immigrant families into America through a controlled and orderly process or you are not."

~ I embrace the legal integration of immigrants into our great melting pot, but abhor those who try to group illegals into this group. There is a legal way to enter this country. Either use it, or go home.
01:08 PM on 04/05/2012
They are illegal, illegal is illegal. MyaMexico needs to work and take care of its own people. Maybe after we leave the middle east we can venture to a more dangerous third world country and try to give some support to mexico. Send the working men back and maybe start an army to defend thier homeland.
06:33 PM on 04/04/2012
Why do people who are "illegal", think they have a right to rewrite the rules?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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Penelope Pitstop
Glamour Gal of the Gas Pedal
01:05 PM on 04/05/2012
if Holder were doing his job they'd be deported
04:38 PM on 04/04/2012
There are legal immigrants into the United States, and there are illegal aliens who sneak across the border in the middle of the night. Why do illegal aliens, who are in violation of US laws, feel that they have some right to rewrite the rules. They don't. There are an estimated 12 million here, taking jobs and sucking the social safety net dry, who need to be deported immediately at their own expense. People who cut to the front of the line do not have any rights except to go home.
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Jerry Bourbon
03:21 PM on 04/04/2012
I wonder if Luisito would go into a bit more detail about all these "anti immigrant" policies coming from the Republicans.

I say this because I am not aware of ANY Republican policy that in any way impacts legal permament residents (ie. immigrants) to this country.

Are you?
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CelticMajic
The answer lies in each of us individually
02:25 PM on 04/05/2012
None whatsoever.
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Hacim Obmed
02:39 PM on 04/04/2012
If Rep Gutierrez is honest about the Dream act or Comprehensive reform why does he not push to have the democratic party adopt some of his positions as a formal plank in the party platform. Is he afraid that even his fellow democrats would reject this sort of policy if actually asked to stand up and vote on it publicly? After all the party has no problem putting gay marriage into the platform why not something on Amnesty for Illegals? Come on guys if you are serious then instead of complaining that you got no republican support lest see your democrat support. If illegal aliens are really so popular with the voters why don't you go for it.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zappbrannigan420
I'm not taking attendance you dork!
12:10 PM on 04/04/2012
As a American citizen of Cuban descent I can honestly say I disagree with this fellow. We don't need to suddenly grant amnesty to millions of illegal immigrants, we need to deport them. I would, however, offer citizenship in exchange for military service - with a caveat that they must serve at least 4 years before gaining citizenship and another 4 years for the GI Bill.
11:55 AM on 04/04/2012
People in IL need to make sure that Guiterrez is never re-elected.....just typing his name made my skin crawl....
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Czechster
Enough is enough
11:49 AM on 04/04/2012
Look this guy is just another self serving Latino looking to secure his political office at the expense of the hard working taxpayers of this country. He is a one trick pony that brings nothing to better the people as a whole and works only for the illegals from Mexico. Enough is enough.
05:09 PM on 04/05/2012
Bad thing about this guy and others just like him is that he keeps getting reelected. Too bad there's not some way to better educate the electorate that these guys might distribute a crumb or two while making sure that they get the lion's share
Teckwa
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Czechster
Enough is enough
07:45 PM on 04/05/2012
Totally agree.
08:16 AM on 04/04/2012
Abolish the Visa Lottery System.
08:07 AM on 04/04/2012
What the young people described by Representative Gutierrez can do, is leave the United States, return to their country of origin, apply for a resident VISA, when accepted, return to the United States as legal aliens.

Nothing less will do.
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spytheweb
Black Democrat
03:53 AM on 04/04/2012
No amnesty for any illegal aliens period. Go back to your country and apply for permission to enter. If you get none, stay home.