Wiggly words on immigration policy from 2016 GOP contenders

DENVER (AP) — Thanks to Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, it’s becoming even clearer that immigration is the banana peel of 2016 Republican presidential politics.

Just ask Florida Sen. Marco Rubio.

He stepped up as a Senate leader on immigration only to slip and fall in a tea party ruckus over the issue. In a moment of candor, Rubio remembered the months of trying to get back up as “a real trial for me.”

Others, too, have shifted on the matter.

Now it’s oops for Walker.

In 2013, Walker said it “makes sense” to offer a way to citizenship for immigrants in the country illegally. Early this month, however, he said he no longer supports “amnesty.”

Complicating that switch, Walker recently discussed immigration with New Hampshire party leaders. One of them, state leader Jennifer Horn, says that Walker favored legal status, a position many conservatives equate with “amnesty.”

Worse for Walker, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that he actually said he favored a path to citizenship, though Horn denies Walker said that.

Even former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who has a strong voice — and a book — on immigration, has wiggled.

Rubio and Walker are not alone in embracing an immigration overhaul at some point. But doing so raises the specter of “amnesty” in the minds of those who want people unlawfully in the country to be given no relief from the threat of deportation.

“All the candidates have mixed statements — they have statements that seem to support amnesty and they all have ones that seem to oppose it,” said Roy Beck, executive director of Numbers USA, which seeks to reduce immigration. “They’re torn between the big-money people who gain from high immigration and the voters who oppose it.”

Luis Alvarado, a California-based GOP strategist, said most Republican officials privately acknowledge that the country has to legalize the status of people who are here unlawfully while also bolstering border security. “They believe that no one in their conscious mind can deport 11 million people from this country,” Alvarado said. “But, politically, they have to play word games to be elected in the primary.”

Among the potential 2016 hopefuls:

—Bush has said he will not back away from his support for giving legal status to many in the country illegally. But his 2013 book outlining that stance marks a departure from an earlier position that envisaged eventual citizenship.

—Before he shied away from the issue, Rubio co-wrote a bill with a path to citizenship that passed the Senate and failed in the House. He now says the bill was the wrong approach and that the focus should be on border security, a standard GOP position that leaves questions about deportation unanswered.

—Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul voted against Rubio’s bill but says the millions of people in the country illegally cannot all be sent home.

—New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie once supported an overhaul; now he won’t say where he stands. His state, though, is backing other Republican-led states in a suit against President Barack Obama’s orders deferring deportation for some immigrants.

—Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry is talking tougher on immigration than when he called his 2012 campaign rivals heartless if they opposed a law that lets some children of immigrants in the U.S. illegally pay in-state tuition at public colleges. Even so, he says the U.S. will not deport all people here illegally.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, the only declared candidate so far, has kept a fairly consistent tough line on the issue.

Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union, said “the ground has shifted” on the issue for two reasons. He cited the influx of Central American youth crossing the border illegally last summer overwhelmed federal officials, and said Obama’s unilateral acts to shield some immigrants from deportation made it politically impossible for a Republican to embrace a pathway to citizenship.

“You’ve got to cut these guys some slack,” Schlapp said of the presidential hopefuls and their wavering words.

But Frank Sharry of America’s Voice, which supports an overhaul, said some of Bush’s rivals are “going to be accused of flip-flopping and that’s going to become a character issue” playing into Bush’s hands.

The wide-open nature of the GOP race also brings to light a tension between what some Republican fundraisers want — an overhaul with a legal path — and what conservative primary voters wish for.

Spencer Zwick, finance chairman for 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney, is one donor who has said he will only support candidates who favor such an overhaul. At this early stage, the competition for dollars has been more intense than the competition for votes.

“Once they get into the debates, this all changes,” Beck of Numbers USA predicted, meaning he expects the candidates to rally behind a harder line.

Source Article from http://news.yahoo.com/wiggly-words-immigration-potential-republican-field-074330973–election.html
Wiggly words on immigration policy from 2016 GOP contenders
http://news.yahoo.com/wiggly-words-immigration-potential-republican-field-074330973–election.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Wiggly words on immigration from potential Republican field

DENVER (AP) — It’s become even clearer thanks to Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker: Immigration is the banana peel of 2016 Republican presidential politics.

Just ask Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. He stepped up as a Senate leader on immigration only to slip and fall in a tea party ruckus over the issue. In a moment of candor, Rubio remembered the months of trying to get back up as “a real trial for me.” Others, too, have shifted on the matter.

Now it’s oops for Walker.

In 2013, Walker said offering immigrants in the country a way to become citizens “makes sense.” Early this month, however, he said he no longer supports “amnesty.” Complicating that switch, Walker recently discussed immigration with New Hampshire party leaders. One of them, state chair Jennifer Horn, says that he favored legal status — a position many conservatives equate with “amnesty.” Worse for Walker, The Wall Street Journal reported Thursday that he actually said he favored a path to citizenship, though Horn denies Walker said that.

Even former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who has a strong voice — and a book — on immigration, has wiggled.

Rubio and Walker are not alone in embracing an immigration overhaul at some point. But doing so raises the specter of “amnesty” in the minds of those who want people unlawfully in the country to be given no relief from the threat of deportation.

“All the candidates have mixed statements — they have statements that seem to support amnesty and they all have ones that seem to oppose it,” said Roy Beck, executive director of Numbers USA, which seeks to reduce immigration. “They’re torn between the big-money people who gain from high immigration and the voters who oppose it.”

Luis Alvarado, a California-based GOP strategist, said most Republican officials privately acknowledge that the country has to legalize the status of people who are here unlawfully while also bolstering border security. “They believe that no one in their conscious mind can deport 11 million people from this country,” Alvarado said. “But, politically, they have to play word games to be elected in the primary.”

Among the potential 2016 hopefuls:

—Bush has said he won’t shrink from his support for giving legal status to many in the country illegally. But his 2013 book outlining that stance marks a departure from an earlier position that envisaged eventual citizenship.

—Before he shied away from the issue, Rubio co-wrote a bill with a path to citizenship that passed the Senate and failed in the House. He now says the bill was the wrong approach and that the focus should be on border security, a standard GOP position that leaves questions about deportation unanswered.

—Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul voted against Rubio’s bill but says the millions of people in the country illegally can’t all be sent home.

—New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie once supported an overhaul; now he won’t say where he stands. His state, though, is backing other Republican-led states in a suit against President Barack Obama’s orders deferring deportation for some immigrants.

—Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry is talking tougher on immigration than when he called his 2012 campaign rivals heartless if they opposed a law that lets some children of undocumented immigrants pay in-state tuition at public colleges. Even so, he says the U.S. will not deport all people here illegally.

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, the only declared candidate so far, has kept a fairly consistent tough line on the issue.

Matt Schlapp, chairman of the American Conservative Union, said “the ground has shifted” on the issue for two reasons — an influx of Central American youth crossing the border illegally last summer overwhelmed federal officials, and Obama’s unilateral acts to shield some immigrants from deportation made it politically impossible for a Republican to embrace a pathway to citizenship.

“You’ve got to cut these guys some slack,” Schlapp said of the presidential hopefuls and their wavering words.

But Frank Sharry of America’s Voice, which supports an overhaul, said some of Bush’s rivals are “going to be accused of flip-flopping and that’s going to become a character issue” playing into Bush’s hands.

The wide-open nature of the GOP race also brings to light a tension between what some Republican fundraisers want — an overhaul with a legal path — and what conservative primary voters wish for. Spencer Zwick, finance chairman for 2012 Republican nominee Mitt Romney, is one donor who has said he will only support candidates who favor such an overhaul. At this early stage, the competition for dollars has been more intense than the competition for votes.

“Once they get into the debates, this all changes,” Beck of Numbers USA predicted, meaning he expects the candidates to rally behind a harder line.

Source Article from http://news.yahoo.com/wiggly-words-immigration-potential-republican-field-070130466–election.html
Wiggly words on immigration from potential Republican field
http://news.yahoo.com/wiggly-words-immigration-potential-republican-field-070130466–election.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration official suspended for sexually harassing passenger

New Delhi, March 27 (IANS) An immigration officer has been suspended for alleged verbal sexual harassment of a woman passenger who took a flight to Hong Kong on March 18 from Delhi, a home ministry official said on Friday.

“The immigration officer has been suspended and a departmental inquiry has been initiated,” the official told IANS on the condition of anonymity.

Speaking to Times Now, the woman, a homemaker whose identity was not revealed, claimed that immigration officer Vinod Kumar harassed her by asking “several uncomfortable personal questions”.

The woman alleged that she was at the immigration counter before she boarded the flight for Hong Kong, where she went to meet her husband.

She said the immigration officer not only harassed her during the immigration process at the desk, but also by following her along at the escalator between the domestic and international transfer.

“He asked me questions like how many children I have, do I drink, do I smoke or eat chicken. He also asked me whether I sleep with other men when my husband is at work,” the woman told the news channel.

“Not once or twice, but he asked me four times if I had undergone a surgery for birth control. He even asked whether I would like to have my third child with him,” she said.

The woman’s father-in-law has filed a complaint with Commissioner, Bureau Of Immigration, Delhi, P.K. Bhardwaj via e-mail on March 23 after the woman returned from her Hong Kong trip.

After the media highlighted the issue, the home ministry, under which the immigration department falls, took action by suspending the immigration official and set up a departmental inquiry.

Source Article from http://en-maktoob.news.yahoo.com/immigration-official-suspended-sexually-harassing-passenger-160611653.html
Immigration official suspended for sexually harassing passenger
http://en-maktoob.news.yahoo.com/immigration-official-suspended-sexually-harassing-passenger-160611653.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Attitudes shift on illegal immigration, but unity eludes other issues

Times change. Attitudes soften. People get to know each other and chill.

Twenty-one years ago, California voters decided overwhelmingly — 59% of them — to deny public services for immigrants who came here illegally. That included refusing to educate kids.

Courts tossed out most of Proposition 187. But they couldn’t throw out the sentiment behind it.

Fast-forward to a dramatic reversal in opinion.

In a new statewide poll released Wednesday night, the Public Policy Institute of California reported that the vast majority of voters now favor providing a pathway to citizenship for immigrants here illegally.

They’d need to meet certain conditions, including paying back-taxes, passing a criminal-background check, undergoing a waiting period and learning English.

Likely voters favored citizenship for these immigrants by 73% to 24%. Even 61% of Republicans favored it, although nationally GOP politicians have been the biggest obstacle to immigration reform.

All ethnic and age groups strongly supported such citizenship. So did every California region, whether blue or red.

A USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times poll last September also found broad California support for legalization..

Why the turnaround?

“So many Californians experience immigrants in their daily lives,” said Mark Baldassare, the policy institute’s president and pollster. “And they’re positive experiences.

“We’ve seen in our polling that people consistently see immigrants as more of a benefit to the economy than a burden. They know the importance of citizenship. And they’re at the point where they just want a solution.”

Republicans nationally have been dragging their feet on immigration reform, one of the blemishes on the GOP brand in California, where the Latino electorate has grown substantially since Proposition 187.

Three Republican congressmen from the immigrant-rich San Joaquin Valley — Reps. Devin Nunes of Tulare, Jeff Denham of Turlock and David Valadao of Hanford — have been fighting their party on the issue, pushing for major reform. So has the agriculture industry.

But not the valley’s most powerful congressman, Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy of Bakersfield. He reflects his party’s national base and opposes a comprehensive immigration bill because, his spokesman Matt Sparks recently told The Times, President Obama “cannot be entrusted to enforce the immigration laws previously enacted by Congress.”

Last November, the impatient president acted on his own, through an executive order, to shelter from threatened deportation up to 5 million immigrants living in the country illegally. Roughly 1.5 million are in California.

A Texas federal judge froze the Obama program, and the case is probably headed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In the policy institute’s poll, 57% of likely voters supported the president’s unilateral action. People’s views of Obama played into their opinions, Baldassare said.

Overall, however, California no longer is bashing illegal immigration.

There’s no broad public consensus on three other issues confronting the state, the poll found. And it’s one reason the politicians often have such a tough time taking decisive action.

One polarizing issue is Gov. Jerry Brown’s bullet train project.

The price tag, projected at $68 billion, is twice what voters were told when they approved the Los Angeles to San Francisco high-speed-rail line seven years ago. And the start of construction is more than two years behind schedule for a 29-mile section in the San Joaquin Valley.

Asked whether they now favor or oppose building the rail system, voters were evenly split: 48% to 48%. The biggest support was in the San Francisco Bay Area, the weakest in the Central Valley and Inland Empire.

Another issue where voters are torn is whether to spend windfall tax receipts on higher education or on paying down state debt.

The pollster noted that state government is expected to enjoy a multibillion-dollar surplus over the next several years. Voters were asked whether the extra should be used to restore university funding or to pay off debt. The response: 47% universities, 48% debt.

Voters sided with Brown in his dispute with the University of California over money. They also did in a USC Dornsife/Times poll in February.

The governor has proposed kicking in an extra $120 million next year, but only if tuition remains frozen. UC President Janet Napolitano says the university needs $100 million more than that annually or it will hike tuition 5% a year.

Asked about this in the institute’s poll, 52% of voters said university funding should be increased only if tuition isn’t raised. In fact, 27% said funding shouldn’t be boosted in any case.

Brown and Napolitano are trying to negotiate a compromise.

One plus for Brown: His job approval remains high for a politician who has been around so long. It’s at 56%.

Whether to extend Brown’s “soak the rich” tax increase — Proposition 30 — when it starts to expire after next year is another issue that divides Californians.

Brown insists it was only meant as a temporary tax, as he promised. But a lot of money is involved — more than $6 billion annually — and Democrats are plotting to keep the revenue flowing.

In the poll, 48% of voters favored extending the tax; 32% even making it permanent. But 45% said let it expire. There was one unifying thought, however: 68% said the voters should decide, not the Legislature.

They still don’t trust Sacramento.

But they’ve lightened up on illegal immigration. Maybe it’s not exactly welcomed. But it’s tolerated and viewed realistically.

george.skelton@latimes.com

Twitter: @LATimesSkelton

Copyright © 2015, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/about/la-me-cap-california-poll-20150326-column.html?track=rss
Attitudes shift on illegal immigration, but unity eludes other issues
http://www.latimes.com/about/la-me-cap-california-poll-20150326-column.html?track=rss
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration workshop set for Bunnell

The workshop is scheduled for 7 p.m. Thursday at 1102 E. Moody Blvd. It will provide immigrants information on the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents program, also called DAPA. It will also deal with DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, according to a press release.

“It’s designed to help people get a handle on this thing,” said attorney Edward Oddo Jr., who will present information at the workshop.

One way to get a handle on things is not to wait until the last minute to start looking for documents, Oddo said. Start getting birth certificates and other documentation together now, he said.

“Get everything together now so when the regulations go into effect you will be ready,” Oddo said.

A date has not been set when DAPA applications can be submitted or for DACA, according to the National Immigration Law Center website. That’s because a federal court has temporarily put a hold on both programs.

For more information about the workshop or reservations, call 386-586-6985

Source Article from http://www.news-journalonline.com/article/20150324/news/150329756
Immigration workshop set for Bunnell
http://www.news-journalonline.com/article/20150324/news/150329756
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

How immigration came to haunt Labour: the inside story

As holder of the ancient post of lord chancellor, responsible for courts and judges across the land, Derry Irvine had a knack for shutting down irritating interventions from his colleagues. During his time in office, from 1997 to 2003, Irvine’s fearsome reputation preceded him. Minor functionaries and even cabinet ministers would cower when the lord chancellor, who once compared himself to his 16th-century predecessor Cardinal Wolsey, felt they had not mastered their briefs.

Tony Blair might have thought that as the nation’s leader he would escape a lashing from Irvine. But “Young Blair” – Irvine’s name for the prime minister, dating back to 1976, when Irvine gave him his first professional opening as a pupil barrister – was briefly silenced during a fraught meeting early in Labour’s second term in which a worrying rise in the number of asylum cases was being discussed.

The gravest offence, in Lord Irvine’s eyes, was to call into question Britain’s solemn commitments on human rights, notably those made after the second world war in the European convention on human rights (ECHR). When ministers dared to broach the issue of drawing back from some aspects of the ECHR as a way of curbing asylum applications, Irvine’s response was sharp. “I don’t know why you guys don’t just adopt the Zimbabwean constitution and have done with it,” he told Blair and the home secretary, David Blunkett. The discussion was brought to a swift conclusion when Lord Goldsmith, the attorney general, pointed out that Britain would be in breach of its EU membership terms if it sought to wriggle out of its responsibilities under the separate ECHR. New Labour would have to find another solution to its immigration problem.

As today’s generation of political leaders prepares to fight an election that is in part a contest about the mistakes, judgments and assumptions Labour made in government on immigration, it is easy to forget just how much immigration and asylum haunted Downing Street throughout New Labour’s time in office. Between 1997 and 2010, net annual immigration quadrupled, and the UK population was boosted by more than 2.2 million immigrants, more than twice the population of Birmingham. In Labour’s last term in government, 2005-2010, net migration reached on average 247,000 a year.

The dramatic changes have left British politics ruptured. Immigration remains the No 1 issue on the doorstep, according to pollsters – a stream that feeds into the well of mistrust in politics. It has spawned the emergence of Ukip and helped create four- or five-party politics in the UK for the first time.

Despite the Conservative party’s recent travails over its broken pledge to bring net migration down to the low tens of thousands, the issue has been a special bind for Labour. In the wake of the party’s defeat in the 2010 election, there was a brief mass mea culpa about immigration, but even now Labour struggles to explain to a core part of its electorate the decisions that were taken on its watch.

Nigel Farage, the Ukip leader, has made capital out of his claim that the Labour government embarked on a deliberate policy to encourage immigration by stealth. Ukip often cites an article by Andrew Neather, a former No 10 and Home Office adviser, who wrote that the Labour government embarked on a deliberate policy from late 2000 to “open up the UK to mass migration”. Yet where Farage sees a political conspiracy behind the numbers, others veer towards the theory of history identified by the great 20th-century historian AJP Taylor, who always stressed the significance of chance events.

Even the most ardent defenders of the New Labour government acknowledge that such a wave of immigration was not purely down to chance. But the key players of the time show in candid conversations that they were struggling to cope with a new world of rapid population movement across porous borders. At times they felt they were stumbling from one move to another, unsure of the present, let alone the future.

Leap in immigration threatens Labour lead

As the head of Tony Blair’s policy delivery unit during his second term in office, from 2001 to 2005, Michael Barber did not get many chances to lie in on the weekends. One Saturday morning in February 2003, he took the liberty of sleeping until 8.50am. Ten minutes later, his phone rang. On the other end of the line was an anxious prime minister. Blair was once again fixated on the issue that had plagued his first term in office. “He was worrying away about illegal asylum applications,” Barber wrote in his diary.

In his new book, How to Run a Government, Barber recounts how he delivered the bad news: there had been a big jump in asylum applications as refugees from Afghanistan, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq and Kosovo headed to Britain. By Monday morning, having read the 1951 UN convention on refugees, Blair cleared his diary for the entire morning to allow him to spend five hours “forensically” going through the asylum caseload. The following day Blair summoned the relevant ministers to a meeting of the government’s emergency Cabinet Office Briefing Room (Cobra) committee, where he ran rings round most of the people in the room. Barber was deeply impressed with the detailed way in which Blair handled the issue.

Labour feared that the failure to grip the asylum challenge risked making the government look incompetent and – more damagingly – out of touch. “Immigration per se, but non‑European immigration [in particular], was a huge, huge issue for Tony Blair,” recalls Sir Stephen Wall, who was head of the Cabinet Office’s European secretariat between 2000-04. “I remember him saying, very soon after the 2001 election, ‘The one thing that could lose me the next election is immigration.’”

From the first year in office, the issue had hit the Labour government like a whirlwind. In 1997 net migration had been 48,000, but it rose extremely rapidly over the next 12 months, almost trebling to 140,000 in 1998. It was never to fall below 100,000 again.

Ministers and officials from that era recall in painful detail the apparently impossible task of dealing with the surge in asylum applications, as refugees fled to Britain. Almost every day, newspaper headlines would sneer at chaos in Whitehall as the Immigration and Nationality Directorate, later described as dysfunctional by ministers, struggled to cope.

Charles Clarke, who took over as home secretary in 2004, says that from Labour’s first days in office, the system for assessing applications for citizenship, residency and asylum claims was a mess. “We developed a massive backlog, particularly on asylum where we had cases waiting literally five years to be solved,” Clarke says. “That was the core problem that had built up behind an unmanageable set of issues. It was a complete nightmare and led to a sense of complete ungovernability of the whole system and that I think has undermined confidence in it.”

Refugees near Calais in 2002.

Refugees near Calais in 2002 Photograph: Reuters

Source Article from http://feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663828/s/44bbc9ab/sc/7/l/0L0Stheguardian0N0Cnews0C20A150Cmar0C240Chow0Eimmigration0Ecame0Eto0Ehaunt0Elabour0Einside0Estory/story01.htm
How immigration came to haunt Labour: the inside story
http://feeds.theguardian.com/c/34708/f/663828/s/44bbc9ab/sc/7/l/0L0Stheguardian0N0Cnews0C20A150Cmar0C240Chow0Eimmigration0Ecame0Eto0Ehaunt0Elabour0Einside0Estory/story01.htm
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Jailed immigration advisor faces new complaints


File photo / NZ Herald
File photo / NZ Herald

A former immigration advisor who was jailed for acting without a licence has asked for new complaints against him to be reconsidered because he couldn’t respond while in prison.

Hakaoro Hakaoro was jailed in January 2014 for 20 months after admitting charges brought by the Immigration Advisers Authority.He had already been disciplined seven times, including for making a woman his slave and offering to get another woman pregnant to help her gain residency.

Hakaoro now faces six more complaints before the Immigration Advisers Disciplinary Tribunal.He has applied to have the six complaints referred back to the Immigration Advisers Authority, saying he did not have the opportunity to respond.

The registrar said Hakaoro was served all of the relevant documents, and had a reasonable time to respond.In four decisions made on March 12, the tribunal agreed he had ample time to respond to each of the complaints.

The matters would be dealt with by the tribunal on the papers.Decisions on the remaining two complaints have not been published.In previous cases, Hakaoro was found to have told a client he would get her pregnant, as having a child was the fastest way to get a work permit.

The tribunal upheld a complaint from the woman, who refused repeated requests from Hakaoro to go to a motel and have sex to get her pregnant.In another case, a woman who was in New Zealand illegally and under financial stress agreed to be his servant in July 2011.

She was exploited and expected to undertake inappropriate tasks including heavy lifting and massaging Hakaoro’s wife in the early hours of the morning.He also told her he would get her a residence permit if she would have sex with him.

- NZME.

Source Article from http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11422299&ref=rss
Jailed immigration advisor faces new complaints
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11422299&ref=rss
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Rauner’s Immigration Message Leaves Advocates Perplexed

CHICAGO (AP) — More than two months after taking the reins of one of the nation’s most immigrant-friendly states, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner has offered mixed signals about his stance on immigration.

He’s publicly backed “comprehensive reform” and tells stories of his Swedish dairyman grandfather’s immigration, but rescinded executive orders aimed at making the state more welcoming to immigrants. He refused to join other GOP governors in a lawsuit against President Barack Obama’s immigration executive action, but proposed slashing roughly $8 million in services to help refugees and immigrants who want citizenship.

The contrasting views have left many immigration reform advocates in Illinois, including a leading Democratic congressman and a growing voting bloc, waiting for clarity.

“Like much of Gov. Rauner’s agenda, it’s a big question mark,” Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights executive director Lawrence Benito said.

Rauner says he’s “pro-immigration.” He told a group of Latino business leaders in Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood Friday that he’ll be pushing Congress to pass comprehensive immigration reform this year. He didn’t detail what he thinks that legislation should include, but said the U.S. should “help those folks who are here to become citizens.” He didn’t discuss his plans for the state.

And at an Illinois Business Immigration Coalition event earlier this month with Republicans, he talked about lessons gleaned from his grandparents’ struggles and his choice of Lt. Gov. Evelyn Sanguinetti, born in Florida to Cuban and Ecuadoran immigrants.

“I think we have it backward in America. I think we make legal immigration almost impossible and we make illegal immigration relatively easy. I think we’ve got to flip that around,” he told reporters the following day near Springfield.

U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez of Chicago — known nationally for being an immigration activist and sponsoring immigration legislation — said he wants to work with Rauner. Rauner spokesman Lance Trover said a meeting is planned for April.

“It’s a mistake to not continue the very clear trajectory that Illinois has taken on immigration,” Gutierrez said.

Rauner’s lack of specificity on the issue has been particularly noticeable in Illinois, where foreign-born individuals make up roughly 14 percent of the population. Connected activists rallied nearly a half-million people to march Chicago in 2006. Illinois has since established a private scholarship fund for immigrant students living in the U.S. without legal permission, and in 2013 began offering drivers’ licenses to immigrants living here illegally.

What Rauner has done is cancel two immigrant-related executive orders put in place by predecessor Democrat Pat Quinn. One prohibited state law enforcement agencies from stopping anyone based solely on citizenship or immigration status. The other provided ways to help immigrants benefit from Obama’s executive action designed to curb deportations.

Rauner said Friday the two orders, among the seven of Quinn’s that Rauner rescinded, were part of an agenda “that was just not productive” and that he planned to set his own “pro-immigration” agenda.

The governor has won praise from advocates for not joining 26 states in a federal lawsuit to block Obama’s sweeping action, announced in November. Rauner told reporters it wasn’t “productive” to sue.

Rauner has defended his proposed budget cuts, saying he needs to close a roughly $1.6 billion deficit. He’s proposed slashing more than $6 million from Department of Human Services’ budget for “integration services,” which provide language and citizenship classes through community organizations. Another nearly $2 million on the chopping block is Illinois’ share for refugee mental health services and more than half a dozen welcoming centers, which offer language services and help with applying for benefits.

“Some programs have to be cut, the money’s not there,” Rauner said last week when asked about the proposed cuts.

Immigrants and advocates say the state-funded services are critical to assimilating and helping people potentially become citizens.

There was a roughly 11 percent jump in the number of people living in Illinois who became U.S. citizens from 2010 to 2013, and new citizens are a reliable source of voter registrations. Most of the roughly 27,000 Illinois voters that Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights registered in 2014 were new citizens.

Claudia Timm, an immigrant from Mexico who married an American citizen, said navigating the citizenship process on her own was costly and complicated. She relied on the West Suburban Action Project, which provides taxpayer-funded help, and became a citizen in November.

“It’s made a big difference for me and my family,” the 40-year-old suburban mother said. “I can vote.”

(© 2015 by STATS LLC and Associated Press. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC and Associated Press is strictly prohibited.)

Source Article from http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2015/03/23/rauners-immigration-message-leaves-advocates-perplexed/
Rauner’s Immigration Message Leaves Advocates Perplexed
http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2015/03/23/rauners-immigration-message-leaves-advocates-perplexed/
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Rauner's immigration message leaves advocates perplexed




Posted Mar. 22, 2015 at 7:16 PM

Updated at 7:17 PM



Source Article from http://www.sj-r.com/article/20150322/NEWS/150329853/1994/NEWS?rssfeed=true
Rauner's immigration message leaves advocates perplexed
http://www.sj-r.com/article/20150322/NEWS/150329853/1994/NEWS?rssfeed=true
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Rauner's immigration message leaves advocates perplexed


More than two months after taking the reins of one of the nation’s most immigrant-friendly states, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner has offered mixed signals about his stance on immigration.

He’s publicly backed “comprehensive reform” and tells stories of his Swedish dairyman grandfather’s immigration, but he rescinded executive orders aimed at making the state more welcoming to immigrants. He refused to join other GOP governors in a lawsuit against President Barack Obama’s immigration executive action, but he proposed slashing roughly $8 million in services to help refugees and immigrants who want citizenship.


The contrasting views have left many immigration reform advocates in Illinois, including a leading Democratic congressman and a growing voting bloc, waiting for clarity.

“Like much of Gov. Rauner’s agenda, it’s a big question mark,” said Lawrence Benito, executive director of Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights.

Rauner says he’s “pro-immigration.” He told a group of Latino business leaders in Chicago’s Little Village neighborhood Friday that he’ll be pushing Congress to pass comprehensive immigration reform this year. He didn’t detail what he thinks that legislation should include, but he said the U.S. should “help those folks who are here to become citizens.” He didn’t discuss his plans for the state.

And at an Illinois Business Immigration Coalition event earlier this month with Republicans, he talked about lessons gleaned from his grandparents’ struggles and his choice of Lt. Gov. Evelyn Sanguinetti, born in Florida to Cuban and Ecuadorean immigrants.

“I think we have it backward in America. I think we make legal immigration almost impossible and we make illegal immigration relatively easy. I think we’ve got to flip that around,” he told reporters the following day near Springfield.

U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez of Chicago — known nationally for being an immigration activist and sponsoring immigration legislation — said he wants to work with Rauner. Rauner spokesman Lance Trover said a meeting is planned for April.

“It’s a mistake to not continue the very clear trajectory that Illinois has taken on immigration,” Gutierrez said.

Rauner’s lack of specificity on the issue has been particularly noticeable in Illinois, where foreign-born individuals make up roughly 14 percent of the population. Connected activists rallied nearly a half-million people to march Chicago in 2006. Illinois has since established a private scholarship fund for immigrant students living in the U.S. without legal permission, and in 2013 it began offering driver’s licenses to immigrants living here illegally.

What Rauner has done is cancel two immigrant-related executive orders put in place by predecessor Democrat Pat Quinn. One prohibited state law enforcement agencies from stopping anyone based solely on citizenship or immigration status. The other provided ways to help immigrants benefit from Obama’s executive action designed to curb deportations.

Rauner said Friday the two orders, among the seven of Quinn’s that Rauner rescinded, were part of an agenda “that was just not productive” and that he planned to set his own “pro-immigration” agenda.

The governor has won praise from advocates for not joining 26 states in a federal lawsuit to block Obama’s sweeping action, announced in November. Rauner told reporters it wasn’t “productive” to sue.

Rauner has defended his proposed budget cuts, saying he needs to close a roughly $1.6 billion deficit. He’s proposed slashing more than $6 million from Department of Human Services’ budget for “integration services,” which provide language and citizenship classes through community organizations. Another nearly $2 million on the chopping block is Illinois’ share for refugee mental health services and more than a half dozen welcoming centers, which offer language services and help with applying for benefits.

“Some programs have to be cut. The money’s not there,” Rauner said last week when asked about the proposed cuts.

Immigrants and advocates say the state-funded services are critical to assimilating and helping people potentially become citizens.

There was a roughly 11 percent jump in the number of people living in Illinois who became U.S. citizens from 2010 to 2013, and new citizens are a reliable source of voter registrations. Most of the roughly 27,000 Illinois voters that Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights registered in 2014 were new citizens.

Claudia Timm, an immigrant from Mexico who married an American citizen, said navigating the citizenship process on her own was costly and complicated. She relied on the West Suburban Action Project, which provides taxpayer-funded help, and became a citizen in November.

“It’s made a big difference for me and my family,” the 40-year-old suburban mother said. “I can vote.”

Source Article from http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20150322/news/150329662/
Rauner's immigration message leaves advocates perplexed
http://www.dailyherald.com/article/20150322/news/150329662/
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results