Kansan Kobach a Lightning Rod From Immigration to Voter ID Laws

From illegal immigration to wild
swine, Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach’s keen sense for a
fight has vaulted him from the grasslands to the national stage.

Kobach is a “BloodBrother & on the frontlines taking on
the America hating ObamaGang at every turn,” rock singer Ted Nugent wrote on Facebook this year, after Kobach, a 48-year-old
Republican, lobbied the Texas legislature for the right to shoot
feral hogs from helicopters.

Now the Yale-educated lawyer, who helped draft laws
designed to rid Arizona and Alabama of undocumented immigrants
and challenged the Obama administration’s deferral of
deportations, is facing the same opposition as Kansas Governor
Sam Brownback. Moderate Republicans are in revolt over the
financial fallout from tax cuts and Kobach, to some members of
his own party, has come to symbolize partisan overreach.

Last week, Kobach lost a bid to keep a Democratic U.S.
Senate
candidate on the November ballot, potentially
complicating the race for the Republican incumbent.

“He’s left a trail of destruction across the whole country
from his endeavors,” said Stephen Morris, a farmer who a former
Republican Senate president. “And he’s pushed some very strict
voting laws and insisted we have a voting-fraud problem, which
is not true.”

Kobach, a Tea Party supporter, trailed his Democratic
opponent in an early September poll. Although Kansas is reliably
Republican, it has a history of moderation and the Brownback and
Kobach races have implications beyond state borders.

Ballot Fracas

“Nationally, the Tea Party is no longer in the ascendancy,
and if either one of these guys gets beat in Kansas it’s going
to be even more damaging to Tea Party insurgents and the more
ultra-conservatives in the Republican Party,” said David Yepsen, director of the Paul Simon Public Policy Institute at
Southern Illinois University in Carbondale.

The most recent controversy came to a head Sept. 18 when
the Kansas Supreme Court overturned Kobach’s refusal of
candidate Chad Taylor’s request to remove his name from the
November ballot. The ruling could benefit independent Greg Orman
in his race against Republican Pat Roberts and, in turn, affect
the balance of power in the U.S. Senate.

Kobach’s Sept. 3 decision had preserved a three-way
contest, to the potential benefit of Roberts. Kobach is an
honorary campaign committee member of the Republican senator’s
re-election even as he serves as the state’s chief elections
official.

Meaningless Title

Kobach downplayed the significance of his campaign role,
saying in an interview that he was one of a “cast of
thousands” holding that position and that if he’d known ahead
of time there would be a controversy he wouldn’t have accepted
the position.

He dismissed critics, calling Morris “one of the most
liberal members to serve in the Kansas Senate” and “not a
Republican.”

The last Democrat sent to the U.S. Senate by Kansas voters
was George McGill, who served from 1930 to 1939; the last nod to
a Democratic presidential candidate was 50 years ago, when
voters chose Lyndon Johnson.

In July, more than 100 Republicans endorsed Democrat Paul Davis over Brownback, who pushed for the tax cuts that led to
state credit-rating downgrades.

Ivy League

As polls show the governor’s race a toss-up, a KSN
News/Survey USA survey released Sept. 8 showed Kobach with 43
percent and his Democratic challenger, Jean Schodorf, a former
Republican state senator, with 46 percent. The poll of 825
adults was conducted from Sept. 4 to Sept. 7 and has a margin of
error of 4.2 percentage points.

“He’s been getting criticism for using his office for
partisan gain,” said Neal Allen, an assistant professor of
political science at Wichita State University. “And he gets a
good bit of criticism for not focusing on his secretary of state
duties.”

The son of a Buick dealer in Topeka, Kobach earned degrees
from elite universities — Harvard, Oxford and Yale. He joined
the U.S. Justice Department under Attorney General John Ashcroft
in 2001, overseeing immigration enforcement after the Sept. 11
terrorist attacks. That eventually led to his drafting
immigration restrictions for Arizona.

Papers, Please

It was the strictest such statute in the country in 2010,
requiring immigrants to have registration documents in their
possession at all times. It also made state law enforcement
officers determine an individual’s immigration status during
routine stops or arrests.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June 2012 that Arizona
couldn’t undercut federal law, striking down three provisions,
although leaving in place the requirement that police check the
immigration status of people they suspect are in the country
illegally.

After a failed congressional bid in 2004 Kobach became
chairman of the Kansas Republican Party in 2007. He was elected
secretary of state in 2010, the same year as Brownback, and
successfully pushed a law the next year requiring proof of
citizenship to vote. The law is being challenged in federal
court.

“The feeling among Kansans now is that they’re tired of
the ultra-conservative brand of politics in the state,” said
Nathaniel Birkhead, an assistant professor of political science
at Kansas State University in Manhattan. “This is really voters
saying we asked for it, we got it and we don’t like it.”

While Kansas has a history of political turmoil reaching
back to bloody battles over slavery in the mid-19th century, its
modern-day Republicanism is defined by former U.S. Senators Bob Dole and Nancy Kassebaum — conservative with a small c.

“Until right now it’s been a sane Republican state,” said
John Carlin, a Democrat who served as governor from 1979 to
1987.

“I must admit that Democrats historically have won when
Republicans screwed up,” Carlin said. “I don’t think I’ve ever
seen anything like this.”

Kobach said only the people can judge his record.

“Some on the radical left don’t like those changes,” he
said. “We’ll see what the voters think in a month-and-a-half.”

To contact the reporter on this story:
Tim Jones in Chicago at
tjones58@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Stephen Merelman at
smerelman@bloomberg.net
Justin Blum

Source Article from http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-22/kansan-kobach-a-lightning-rod-from-immigration-to-voter-id-laws.html
Kansan Kobach a Lightning Rod From Immigration to Voter ID Laws
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-22/kansan-kobach-a-lightning-rod-from-immigration-to-voter-id-laws.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

In tight Senate races, immigration could still be a priority issue

When the U.S. Senate race in Arkansas heated up this summer, Mark Pryor found himself under attack from his opponent with a nasty — and inaccurate — ad claiming that the Democrat had supported giving Social Security benefits to people who had forged identities to work in the U.S. illegally. In Georgia, Democratic candidate Michelle Nunn has been fending off charges that she is “pro-amnesty.”

And here in New Hampshire, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen saw her reelection race tighten after Republican Scott Brown launched a barrage of ads faulting her 2010 vote for the Dream Act, which would have granted legal status to some young immigrants.

Earlier this month, Obama acceded to pleas from a number of vulnerable Democrats to delay until after the November election his promise to use executive power to transform the nation’s immigration system. Though the delay angered some activists, many Democrats in tight races were relieved, hoping that his announcement would cool some of the heat of an issue that could energize the GOP base, particularly in states with low numbers of Latino voters.

But Republicans insist that immigration remains a potent issue in many contested Senate races. The president, they note, merely postponed his threat to use his executive power, and could well grant legal status to as many as several million people now here illegally. Though it is Republicans who have stalled immigration reform in the House, they believe Obama’s delay has given them a new opening to attack Democrats — for addressing issues affecting Latinos only when it is politically convenient. Potentially at stake is control of the Senate, which Republicans will seize if they gain six seats.

Days after the White House announced the delay, Brown laced into Obama and Shaheen in his primary night victory speech in New Hampshire, faulting their “failed policies on immigration” for the surge of unaccompanied minors who came across the border from Central America. (He did not mention that a law encouraging unaccompanied minors to seek refuge in the U.S. passed under President Bush, a fellow Republican.)

“A nation without borders is not a nation at all,” Brown said as he previewed his case against Democratic incumbent Shaheen in a state where a mere 3.2% of the population is Latino. “In Washington, what are they doing? They’re only inviting more chaos at the border by creating amnesty.”

“You have someone before you who will do everything in my power to secure our borders,” Brown said to cheers in Concord, “to make sure that you, and everybody else, is safe and secure when you travel around our country.”

Those kinds of lines are playing well for Republicans in competitive Senate races across the country, where the midterm electorate is typically more white and conservative than in presidential years.

Some Republican strategists fear that the hard line adopted by Republicans such as Brown and Tom Cotton, who is running against incumbent Pryor in Arkansas, could further alienate the GOP from Latino voters, who are key to their hopes of regaining the White House in 2016.

But demographics are on their side this year. Latinos make up 5% or less of eligible voters in eight of nine keenly watched Senate races: Alaska, Arkansas, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan and North Carolina. The lone exception is Colorado, where 14.2% of eligible voters are Latino, making it the one contested state where Obama’s delay in fulfilling his promise could actually hurt the Democrat, incumbent Mark Udall.

“Certainly in a place like Colorado, it could make a difference, partly because there are some Hispanic leaders who have said maybe Latinos should not turn out to vote,” said Mark Hugo Lopez, director of Hispanic Research at the Pew Research Center.

Udall’s campaign said the senator was disappointed by Obama’s decision not to act on immigration before the election. His opponent, Republican Cory Gardner, has charged that Udall and Obama are looking at the issue through “the lens of politics,” but he has been far more careful in his critical statements than some GOP candidates in other states. (In explaining his decision, Obama said that before he would act he wanted to ensure the public “understands what the facts are on immigration.”)

Source Article from http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-immigration-2014-campaigns-20140921-story.html?track=rss
In tight Senate races, immigration could still be a priority issue
http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-immigration-2014-campaigns-20140921-story.html?track=rss
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Spending bill leaves out immigration courts

WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress’ must-pass budget bill ignores the Obama administration’s request to accelerate spending on immigration courts to handle the flood of unaccompanied minors at the border — even as it boosts spending flexibility for Border Patrol agents and detention centers.

Immigrant advocates complained that House Republicans who wrote the bill focused on detaining Central American youths and families who crossed the border while ignoring the need for more immigration judges to hear their cases, and lawyers to represent the youths.

“The resolution includes only funding for the prison staffing and no accelerated spending for the judges who hear their legal claims,” said Michelle Brané, director of the Migrant Rights and Justice Program at the Women’s Refugee Commission. “House Republicans, believing these women should be returned immediately to often violent situations in their home countries, determined that judges aren’t as important as prison guards.”

Meanwhile, Senate Democrats barely prevented Republicans from blocking President Barack Obama from fulfilling a promise to issue an executive order before the end of the year that might protect from deportation possibly millions of immigrants living in the country illegally.

Sens. Jeff Session of Alabama and Ted Cruz of Texas had sought to amend a spending bill Thursday to include language that would block executive action by Obama to curb deportations further. They failed on a 50-50 tie vote, but four Democrats in tight races for re-election plus Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia joined all 45 Republicans on trying to block Obama. The four — Sens. Kay Hagan of North Carolina, Mary Landrieu of Louisiana, Mark Pryor of Arkansas and Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire — had successfully lobbied Obama to delay any executive action on immigration until after the November elections.

The White House also criticized the omission of the accelerated spending for immigration courts in the budget bill.

“We need every element of the court process to accomplish the goal of both honoring humanitarian claims and process those who don’t qualify for relief. Without the necessary funds, our efforts to prioritize these cases will be less efficient and effective,” Cecilia Munoz, director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, said.

The spending bill for keeping the government open into December and arming Syrian rebels fighting Islamic militants passed the House on Wednesday and the Senate on Thursday. It also was the vehicle for dealing with the influx of young Central American immigrants.

It wasn’t the first time House Republicans had resisted the administration’s request to spend money on legal proceedings for migrants. Last month, the Justice Department asked to devote more money to providing legal aid to unaccompanied immigrant minors, and House Republicans objected.

Advocates and Democratic congressional aides said the little-noticed omission of language to accelerate spending on immigration courts upset some Democrats. But given that the legislation was needed to avert a government shutdown at the end of the month and was paired with a vote to authorize arming Syrian rebels, the issue got scant attention.

Jen Hing, spokeswoman for Republicans on the House Appropriations Committee, said the panel focused on only critical spending shifts in this week’s legislation. She said the intention of the committee was to keep the legislation “as ‘clean’ as possible.”

The spending bill freezes government agency budgets at current levels into December. The White House budget office also requested a number of items to deal with urgent cases a budget freeze could not accommodate.

Congress never acted on Obama’s $3.7 billion request in July to deal with a wave of families and unaccompanied minors fleeing violence in Central America and crossing into Texas from Mexico. Since then the volume of arrivals at the border has dropped sharply and the issue has receded from the spotlight.

But migrants still are coming, and most who arrived never left. The immigration court system has a backlog of nearly 400,000 cases.

Source Article from http://news.yahoo.com/spending-bill-leaves-immigration-courts-202450626–politics.html
Spending bill leaves out immigration courts
http://news.yahoo.com/spending-bill-leaves-immigration-courts-202450626–politics.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Speaker John Boehner says immigration reform would help economy

House Speaker John A. Boehner dipped back into the immigration debate Thursday, saying that an overhaul — which his Republican majority has refused to vote on — would boost the economy.

Although Boehner noticeably left immigration out of his “five points” economic speech, he acknowledged during questions afterward that it could have been included as an issue that offers economic benefit.

“I think immigration reform would help our economy,” Boehner said

“But you’ve got to secure the borders first. We’ve got a mess, and I think everybody knows we’ve got a mess. Our legal system is broken, our borders aren’t secure and then we’ve got the problem of those that are here without documents,” Boehner said. “It needs to be fixed. We are a nation of immigrants. The sooner we do it, the better the country would be.”

Boehner flirted all year with the prospect of considering immigration reform, but he backed off after Republican lawmakers complained it might hurt them in the November election.

The House’s refusal to act after the Senate passed a bipartisan overhaul in 2013 led President Obama to promise to take executive action after the election to give legal status to some immigrants.

Republicans in the House, who are suing Obama for what they perceive as executive overreach, have warned the White House not to take action without Congress.

For the latest from Congress follow @LisaMascaroinDC

 

Copyright © 2014, Los Angeles Times

Source Article from http://latimes.com.feedsportal.com/c/34336/f/625246/s/3e9b0eac/sc/1/l/0L0Slatimes0N0Cla0Epn0Eboehner0Eimmigration0Eeconomy0E20A140A9180Estory0Bhtml0Dtrack0Frss/story01.htm
Speaker John Boehner says immigration reform would help economy
http://latimes.com.feedsportal.com/c/34336/f/625246/s/3e9b0eac/sc/1/l/0L0Slatimes0N0Cla0Epn0Eboehner0Eimmigration0Eeconomy0E20A140A9180Estory0Bhtml0Dtrack0Frss/story01.htm
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Sessions Defends Americans Who Demand Immigration Enforcement

Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions defended Americans demanding better enforcement of immigration laws, and derided those who demean them.

“I have a message for the American people,” he said. “You have been right from the beginning. You have justly demanded that our borders controlled, our laws be enforced and that at long last immigration policy serve the needs of our own people first. For this virtuous and legitimate demand you have been demeaned, even scorned by the governing class.”

“They know so much this cosmopolitan elite,” he continued. “They want you to believe your concerns are somehow illegitimate — that you are wrong for being worried about your jobs, or your schools, or your communities, or your national security. These elite citizens of the world speak often of their concern about people living in poverty overseas and yet they turn a blind eye to the poverty and suffering in their own country.”

Sessions was urging Democrats to support a bill that would prevent President Obama from using executive action to grant amnesty to illegal immigrants. The president has said he will do so following the midterm elections in November. (RELATED: Obama Promises Immigration Edict After Election)

Sessions slammed the lawyers and staffers working behind the scenes with the president to decide what action he will take. “You don’t get to sit in a room and rewrite the laws of this United States of America. No sir,” he said. “Congress writes the laws.”

Follow Rachel on Twitter
Join the conversation on The Daily Caller

Read more stories from The Daily Caller

Sessions Defends Americans Who Demand Immigration Enforcement [VIDEO]

Tom Cotton Tries To Grow Support Among Farmers [VIDEO]

Google Android’s ‘Active Watching’ Patent Will Try To Photograph, Record, Identify Everyone In A Room

Shepard Smith vs. Josh Earnest: Fox Host GOES OFF, Calls Arab Coalition ‘A Fantasy’ [Video]

Army Bending Over Backwards To Kind Of Appease Women

Source Article from http://news.yahoo.com/sessions-defends-americans-demand-immigration-enforcement-video-210207936.html
Sessions Defends Americans Who Demand Immigration Enforcement
http://news.yahoo.com/sessions-defends-americans-demand-immigration-enforcement-video-210207936.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration is key to New Brunswick's economic growth

Legend has it that when Persian refugees first landed on the shores of India, they were met by the Raja’s (king) messenger who was holding a full glass of milk.

The messenger told the refugees that the Raja has sent the glass of milk to represent India and that like the full glass of milk, India was also full and had no room for newcomers.

The Persian leader then took the milk, added sugar, stirred it until it dissolved and then returned it to the messenger.

He then said, “Tell your Raja, that we will be like the sugar, we won’t take up any extra room but we will sweeten what is already there.” They kept their promise.

The Persians thrived and today, continue to contribute to India’s cultural, industrial and civic landscape. Perhaps you have heard of a few: Freddy Mercury, RohintonMistry and Tata Industries (which owns a few small companies, such as Jaguar, Land Rover, and Air India).

So what does an Indian legend have to do with the election campaign in New Brunswick?

As with most elections, the upcoming New Brunswick provincial election has its key words: jobs, education, deficit, outmigration.

We’ve heard from each of the leaders, their plans to grow the economy, keep people in the province and tackle our new bankrupt economy.

These are honourable goals and certainly are reflective of our current political situation. However, among all of the strategies that have been delivered, debated and even derided, one word has received very little attention – immigration.

Like the Indian Raja, New Brunswick is ignoring the potential of immigration.

And why is that? Even a cursory glance of research on immigration (including that which comes from our own Population Growth Secretariat) strongly demonstrates that an increase in immigration will, not might, but will, help tackle one of New Brunswick’s biggest problems: the economy.

If this is the case, why doesn’t immigration have a place at the political table?

Take a stand

Immigration is a complicated topic for politicians. Not because of substance.

In fact, it’s pretty simple. Bring in people who are willing to start all over again to improve the lives of their children and future generations to a province that needs people, jobs and an increased tax base.

The complicated part is the misinformation. The flawed, and even hateful, arguments that immigrants take jobs, use more than they create and change our perceived identity.

These beliefs exist even when there is an abundance of examples to the contrary. For some reason, the illusion that our glass is full over takes the reality that immigrants could sweeten New Brunswick.

The role of our political leaders is to take a stance on immigration.

Each party needs to articulate in an honest and direct manner their thoughts and plans for immigration.

And they owe it to the voters to provide real and credible data on immigration so that we understand what’s at stake by not making immigration a priority in this election.

Invest in cluster immigration

​Unfortunately, the majority of immigrants who do come to New Brunswick, don’t settle here.

Some of this has to do with limited opportunities but a lot more has to do with a lack of community and cultural supports.

Things have improved somewhat. Items such as ethnic foods, foreign films and newspapers are a lot easier to find that they were a decade ago.

However, everyone needs to feel a sense of community and part of that sense comes from being with people who share some our your history or culture.

Cluster immigration encourages not just one family, but rather multiple families from the same location to immigrate to the same place.

Research shows that in these situations, immigrants tend to stay. A perfect example is the vibrant Filipino community in St. George.

They arrived for jobs; however, rather than moving to urban locations, Filipinos in St. George have developed a sense of community that includes citizens of both their native and new countries.

They are staying, working, growing and adding to the economy.

One-stop services

I was recently involved in a study that examined newcomers’ experiences in New Brunswick.

Interviews and focus groups revealed services for newcomers as a labyrinth of offices, non-profit organizations and paperwork. Newcomers spoke of frustration, mistrust and wasted resources in their attempts to access the services that our government’s shiny immigration website promised them before they arrived.

Rather than spread the funds and energy through a variety of service providers, why not follow the Service New Brunswick model where all newcomer services are at one location?

Not only is this a more economically sound model, but also allows for the centralization of expertise and a higher chance of newcomer integration and success.

Support the structures that invite immigration

The greatest and saddest irony in this issue is that our province already has the structures in place to promote immigration: excellent universities, a bilingual province, a choice between rural and urban lifestyles, world-renowned companies and ACOA-funded programs for innovation and business

A premier who truly is committed to economic growth would seize the opportunity to support these structures as vessels of immigration.  

This requires a close look at what policies can enhance the chance of newcomers coming and staying and working and building New Brunswick.

At the same time, we need a strong voice to speak out against decisions that can threaten immigration.

For example, the recent changes to the Foreign Worker Program deeply impacted many New Brunswick businesses and stemmed the possibility of foreign workers staying in New Brunswick and becoming contributing citizens, yet our provincial political voice was pretty quiet.

Unfortunately, some of the businesses were not so quiet and spoke of the possibility of moving to locations where they could find workers. How does this benefit our province?

Had the Raja not looked at his own newcomers from a different perspective, his country would have lost out on a lot of innovation, culture and opportunities.

Let’s hope that our own leader has the same ability to realize the potential of newcomers to our shores and invite them, rather than turn them away.

Source Article from http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigration-key-brunswicks-economic-growth-090313005.html
Immigration is key to New Brunswick's economic growth
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigration-key-brunswicks-economic-growth-090313005.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration is key to New Brunswick's economic growth

Legend has it that when Persian refugees first landed on the shores of India, they were met by the Raja’s (king) messenger who was holding a full glass of milk.

The messenger told the refugees that the Raja has sent the glass of milk to represent India and that like the full glass of milk, India was also full and had no room for newcomers.

The Persian leader then took the milk, added sugar, stirred it until it dissolved and then returned it to the messenger.

He then said, “Tell your Raja, that we will be like the sugar, we won’t take up any extra room but we will sweeten what is already there.” They kept their promise.

The Persians thrived and today, continue to contribute to India’s cultural, industrial and civic landscape. Perhaps you have heard of a few: Freddy Mercury, RohintonMistry and Tata Industries (which owns a few small companies, such as Jaguar, Land Rover, and Air India).

So what does an Indian legend have to do with the election campaign in New Brunswick?

As with most elections, the upcoming New Brunswick provincial election has its key words: jobs, education, deficit, outmigration.

We’ve heard from each of the leaders, their plans to grow the economy, keep people in the province and tackle our new bankrupt economy.

These are honourable goals and certainly are reflective of our current political situation. However, among all of the strategies that have been delivered, debated and even derided, one word has received very little attention – immigration.

Like the Indian Raja, New Brunswick is ignoring the potential of immigration.

And why is that? Even a cursory glance of research on immigration (including that which comes from our own Population Growth Secretariat) strongly demonstrates that an increase in immigration will, not might, but will, help tackle one of New Brunswick’s biggest problems: the economy.

If this is the case, why doesn’t immigration have a place at the political table?

Take a stand

Immigration is a complicated topic for politicians. Not because of substance.

In fact, it’s pretty simple. Bring in people who are willing to start all over again to improve the lives of their children and future generations to a province that needs people, jobs and an increased tax base.

The complicated part is the misinformation. The flawed, and even hateful, arguments that immigrants take jobs, use more than they create and change our perceived identity.

These beliefs exist even when there is an abundance of examples to the contrary. For some reason, the illusion that our glass is full over takes the reality that immigrants could sweeten New Brunswick.

The role of our political leaders is to take a stance on immigration.

Each party needs to articulate in an honest and direct manner their thoughts and plans for immigration.

And they owe it to the voters to provide real and credible data on immigration so that we understand what’s at stake by not making immigration a priority in this election.

Invest in cluster immigration

​Unfortunately, the majority of immigrants who do come to New Brunswick, don’t settle here.

Some of this has to do with limited opportunities but a lot more has to do with a lack of community and cultural supports.

Things have improved somewhat. Items such as ethnic foods, foreign films and newspapers are a lot easier to find that they were a decade ago.

However, everyone needs to feel a sense of community and part of that sense comes from being with people who share some our your history or culture.

Cluster immigration encourages not just one family, but rather multiple families from the same location to immigrate to the same place.

Research shows that in these situations, immigrants tend to stay. A perfect example is the vibrant Filipino community in St. George.

They arrived for jobs; however, rather than moving to urban locations, Filipinos in St. George have developed a sense of community that includes citizens of both their native and new countries.

They are staying, working, growing and adding to the economy.

One-stop services

I was recently involved in a study that examined newcomers’ experiences in New Brunswick.

Interviews and focus groups revealed services for newcomers as a labyrinth of offices, non-profit organizations and paperwork. Newcomers spoke of frustration, mistrust and wasted resources in their attempts to access the services that our government’s shiny immigration website promised them before they arrived.

Rather than spread the funds and energy through a variety of service providers, why not follow the Service New Brunswick model where all newcomer services are at one location?

Not only is this a more economically sound model, but also allows for the centralization of expertise and a higher chance of newcomer integration and success.

Support the structures that invite immigration

The greatest and saddest irony in this issue is that our province already has the structures in place to promote immigration: excellent universities, a bilingual province, a choice between rural and urban lifestyles, world-renowned companies and ACOA-funded programs for innovation and business

A premier who truly is committed to economic growth would seize the opportunity to support these structures as vessels of immigration.  

This requires a close look at what policies can enhance the chance of newcomers coming and staying and working and building New Brunswick.

At the same time, we need a strong voice to speak out against decisions that can threaten immigration.

For example, the recent changes to the Foreign Worker Program deeply impacted many New Brunswick businesses and stemmed the possibility of foreign workers staying in New Brunswick and becoming contributing citizens, yet our provincial political voice was pretty quiet.

Unfortunately, some of the businesses were not so quiet and spoke of the possibility of moving to locations where they could find workers. How does this benefit our province?

Had the Raja not looked at his own newcomers from a different perspective, his country would have lost out on a lot of innovation, culture and opportunities.

Let’s hope that our own leader has the same ability to realize the potential of newcomers to our shores and invite them, rather than turn them away.

Source Article from http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigration-key-brunswicks-economic-growth-090313005.html
Immigration is key to New Brunswick's economic growth
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigration-key-brunswicks-economic-growth-090313005.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration is key to New Brunswick's economic growth

Legend has it that when Persian refugees first landed on the shores of India, they were met by the Raja’s (king) messenger who was holding a full glass of milk.

The messenger told the refugees that the Raja has sent the glass of milk to represent India and that like the full glass of milk, India was also full and had no room for newcomers.

The Persian leader then took the milk, added sugar, stirred it until it dissolved and then returned it to the messenger.

He then said, “Tell your Raja, that we will be like the sugar, we won’t take up any extra room but we will sweeten what is already there.” They kept their promise.

The Persians thrived and today, continue to contribute to India’s cultural, industrial and civic landscape. Perhaps you have heard of a few: Freddy Mercury, RohintonMistry and Tata Industries (which owns a few small companies, such as Jaguar, Land Rover, and Air India).

So what does an Indian legend have to do with the election campaign in New Brunswick?

As with most elections, the upcoming New Brunswick provincial election has its key words: jobs, education, deficit, outmigration.

We’ve heard from each of the leaders, their plans to grow the economy, keep people in the province and tackle our new bankrupt economy.

These are honourable goals and certainly are reflective of our current political situation. However, among all of the strategies that have been delivered, debated and even derided, one word has received very little attention – immigration.

Like the Indian Raja, New Brunswick is ignoring the potential of immigration.

And why is that? Even a cursory glance of research on immigration (including that which comes from our own Population Growth Secretariat) strongly demonstrates that an increase in immigration will, not might, but will, help tackle one of New Brunswick’s biggest problems: the economy.

If this is the case, why doesn’t immigration have a place at the political table?

Take a stand

Immigration is a complicated topic for politicians. Not because of substance.

In fact, it’s pretty simple. Bring in people who are willing to start all over again to improve the lives of their children and future generations to a province that needs people, jobs and an increased tax base.

The complicated part is the misinformation. The flawed, and even hateful, arguments that immigrants take jobs, use more than they create and change our perceived identity.

These beliefs exist even when there is an abundance of examples to the contrary. For some reason, the illusion that our glass is full over takes the reality that immigrants could sweeten New Brunswick.

The role of our political leaders is to take a stance on immigration.

Each party needs to articulate in an honest and direct manner their thoughts and plans for immigration.

And they owe it to the voters to provide real and credible data on immigration so that we understand what’s at stake by not making immigration a priority in this election.

Invest in cluster immigration

​Unfortunately, the majority of immigrants who do come to New Brunswick, don’t settle here.

Some of this has to do with limited opportunities but a lot more has to do with a lack of community and cultural supports.

Things have improved somewhat. Items such as ethnic foods, foreign films and newspapers are a lot easier to find that they were a decade ago.

However, everyone needs to feel a sense of community and part of that sense comes from being with people who share some our your history or culture.

Cluster immigration encourages not just one family, but rather multiple families from the same location to immigrate to the same place.

Research shows that in these situations, immigrants tend to stay. A perfect example is the vibrant Filipino community in St. George.

They arrived for jobs; however, rather than moving to urban locations, Filipinos in St. George have developed a sense of community that includes citizens of both their native and new countries.

They are staying, working, growing and adding to the economy.

One-stop services

I was recently involved in a study that examined newcomers’ experiences in New Brunswick.

Interviews and focus groups revealed services for newcomers as a labyrinth of offices, non-profit organizations and paperwork. Newcomers spoke of frustration, mistrust and wasted resources in their attempts to access the services that our government’s shiny immigration website promised them before they arrived.

Rather than spread the funds and energy through a variety of service providers, why not follow the Service New Brunswick model where all newcomer services are at one location?

Not only is this a more economically sound model, but also allows for the centralization of expertise and a higher chance of newcomer integration and success.

Support the structures that invite immigration

The greatest and saddest irony in this issue is that our province already has the structures in place to promote immigration: excellent universities, a bilingual province, a choice between rural and urban lifestyles, world-renowned companies and ACOA-funded programs for innovation and business

A premier who truly is committed to economic growth would seize the opportunity to support these structures as vessels of immigration.  

This requires a close look at what policies can enhance the chance of newcomers coming and staying and working and building New Brunswick.

At the same time, we need a strong voice to speak out against decisions that can threaten immigration.

For example, the recent changes to the Foreign Worker Program deeply impacted many New Brunswick businesses and stemmed the possibility of foreign workers staying in New Brunswick and becoming contributing citizens, yet our provincial political voice was pretty quiet.

Unfortunately, some of the businesses were not so quiet and spoke of the possibility of moving to locations where they could find workers. How does this benefit our province?

Had the Raja not looked at his own newcomers from a different perspective, his country would have lost out on a lot of innovation, culture and opportunities.

Let’s hope that our own leader has the same ability to realize the potential of newcomers to our shores and invite them, rather than turn them away.

Source Article from http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigration-key-brunswicks-economic-growth-090313005.html
Immigration is key to New Brunswick's economic growth
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigration-key-brunswicks-economic-growth-090313005.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

Immigration is key to New Brunswick's economic growth

Legend has it that when Persian refugees first landed on the shores of India, they were met by the Raja’s (king) messenger who was holding a full glass of milk.

The messenger told the refugees that the Raja has sent the glass of milk to represent India and that like the full glass of milk, India was also full and had no room for newcomers.

The Persian leader then took the milk, added sugar, stirred it until it dissolved and then returned it to the messenger.

He then said, “Tell your Raja, that we will be like the sugar, we won’t take up any extra room but we will sweeten what is already there.” They kept their promise.

The Persians thrived and today, continue to contribute to India’s cultural, industrial and civic landscape. Perhaps you have heard of a few: Freddy Mercury, RohintonMistry and Tata Industries (which owns a few small companies, such as Jaguar, Land Rover, and Air India).

So what does an Indian legend have to do with the election campaign in New Brunswick?

As with most elections, the upcoming New Brunswick provincial election has its key words: jobs, education, deficit, outmigration.

We’ve heard from each of the leaders, their plans to grow the economy, keep people in the province and tackle our new bankrupt economy.

These are honourable goals and certainly are reflective of our current political situation. However, among all of the strategies that have been delivered, debated and even derided, one word has received very little attention – immigration.

Like the Indian Raja, New Brunswick is ignoring the potential of immigration.

And why is that? Even a cursory glance of research on immigration (including that which comes from our own Population Growth Secretariat) strongly demonstrates that an increase in immigration will, not might, but will, help tackle one of New Brunswick’s biggest problems: the economy.

If this is the case, why doesn’t immigration have a place at the political table?

Take a stand

Immigration is a complicated topic for politicians. Not because of substance.

In fact, it’s pretty simple. Bring in people who are willing to start all over again to improve the lives of their children and future generations to a province that needs people, jobs and an increased tax base.

The complicated part is the misinformation. The flawed, and even hateful, arguments that immigrants take jobs, use more than they create and change our perceived identity.

These beliefs exist even when there is an abundance of examples to the contrary. For some reason, the illusion that our glass is full over takes the reality that immigrants could sweeten New Brunswick.

The role of our political leaders is to take a stance on immigration.

Each party needs to articulate in an honest and direct manner their thoughts and plans for immigration.

And they owe it to the voters to provide real and credible data on immigration so that we understand what’s at stake by not making immigration a priority in this election.

Invest in cluster immigration

​Unfortunately, the majority of immigrants who do come to New Brunswick, don’t settle here.

Some of this has to do with limited opportunities but a lot more has to do with a lack of community and cultural supports.

Things have improved somewhat. Items such as ethnic foods, foreign films and newspapers are a lot easier to find that they were a decade ago.

However, everyone needs to feel a sense of community and part of that sense comes from being with people who share some our your history or culture.

Cluster immigration encourages not just one family, but rather multiple families from the same location to immigrate to the same place.

Research shows that in these situations, immigrants tend to stay. A perfect example is the vibrant Filipino community in St. George.

They arrived for jobs; however, rather than moving to urban locations, Filipinos in St. George have developed a sense of community that includes citizens of both their native and new countries.

They are staying, working, growing and adding to the economy.

One-stop services

I was recently involved in a study that examined newcomers’ experiences in New Brunswick.

Interviews and focus groups revealed services for newcomers as a labyrinth of offices, non-profit organizations and paperwork. Newcomers spoke of frustration, mistrust and wasted resources in their attempts to access the services that our government’s shiny immigration website promised them before they arrived.

Rather than spread the funds and energy through a variety of service providers, why not follow the Service New Brunswick model where all newcomer services are at one location?

Not only is this a more economically sound model, but also allows for the centralization of expertise and a higher chance of newcomer integration and success.

Support the structures that invite immigration

The greatest and saddest irony in this issue is that our province already has the structures in place to promote immigration: excellent universities, a bilingual province, a choice between rural and urban lifestyles, world-renowned companies and ACOA-funded programs for innovation and business

A premier who truly is committed to economic growth would seize the opportunity to support these structures as vessels of immigration.  

This requires a close look at what policies can enhance the chance of newcomers coming and staying and working and building New Brunswick.

At the same time, we need a strong voice to speak out against decisions that can threaten immigration.

For example, the recent changes to the Foreign Worker Program deeply impacted many New Brunswick businesses and stemmed the possibility of foreign workers staying in New Brunswick and becoming contributing citizens, yet our provincial political voice was pretty quiet.

Unfortunately, some of the businesses were not so quiet and spoke of the possibility of moving to locations where they could find workers. How does this benefit our province?

Had the Raja not looked at his own newcomers from a different perspective, his country would have lost out on a lot of innovation, culture and opportunities.

Let’s hope that our own leader has the same ability to realize the potential of newcomers to our shores and invite them, rather than turn them away.

Source Article from http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigration-key-brunswicks-economic-growth-090313005.html
Immigration is key to New Brunswick's economic growth
http://ca.news.yahoo.com/immigration-key-brunswicks-economic-growth-090313005.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results

San Francisco Moves to Pay for Kids’ Immigration Lawyers

San Francisco lawmakers are moving
toward providing $2.1 million for lawyers to represent
undocumented immigrant children facing deportation after
crossing the U.S. border to escape violence in Central America.

The number of cases pending in San Francisco Immigration
Court has tripled in the past three years, creating a shortage
of attorneys to represent children and others there.

“These kids are escaping violence and persecution, and
they’re coming to this country because they want to be safe,”
said David Campos, the San Francisco lawmaker who offered the
funding proposal. “We as a country have an obligation to at
least give these kids due process.” Campos himself arrived in
the U.S. at age 14 as an undocumented immigrant from Guatemala.

San Francisco, California’s fourth-largest city, is among
municipalities nationwide receiving 66,127 unaccompanied minors
apprehended since October as they arrived from Guatemala,
Honduras, El Salvador and Mexico. The surge has overwhelmed
immigration courts even as President Barack Obama directs them
to act more expeditiously on deportation proceedings.

A handful of cities and states, including California, are
joining San Francisco in offering assistance. Chicago, St. Louis
and Bell, California, have taken steps to house immigrant
children who have no relatives in this country. In Texas,
Governor Rick Perry has deployed the state’s National Guard to
deter criminal activity along the border with Mexico.

Legal Services

California Governor Jerry Brown has offered legislation
steering $3 million to nonprofit groups that provide legal
services, and Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick in July
proposed two locations to shelter them. Republican governors in
Alabama, Kansas and North Carolina sent a letter to Obama saying
the failure to return the children will encourage more to cross
the border.

The San Francisco Board of Supervisors unanimously approved
the legal aid Sept. 16 and will take a second required vote on
Sept. 23. While Mayor Ed Lee can approve or veto the measure,
the board has the support needed to override a veto. The mayor
supports the effort and doesn’t plan to oppose it, said his
spokeswoman, Christine Falvey.

Marvin De Leon-Sanic, 17, was among 17 minors who arrived
in the U.S. unaccompanied by an adult and who were scheduled to
appear in San Francisco Immigration Court on Sept. 16. The boy
crossed into Arizona in July, leaving his parents and his home
country of Guatemala to escape gangs in his neighborhood, he
said in an interview before going before a judge, who advised
him to find a lawyer.

‘Killed People’

“They killed people there where I lived,” De Leon-Sanic,
who is staying with a brother in Hayward, California, said in
Spanish in an interview at the court. “I don’t want that to
happen to me.”

Other children facing possible deportation included a 16-year-old girl who fled Guatemala because of rape threats from
gang members and a 14-year-old girl from El Salvador who said
she is pregnant from rape. All were represented by pro-bono
lawyers for the day and were advised to find their own
attorneys.

Paola Ramos, 28, was among a group of undocumented
immigrants who attended the meeting where San Francisco
supervisors approved the legal funding.

Ramos, a house cleaner who said she can’t afford an
attorney for her October immigration hearing, said she fled
Honduras with her 5-year-old daughter Axa after gang members
sought monthly bribes from her shrimp business and threatened
her life if she didn’t pay. The two were kidnapped twice as they
traveled for a month by freight trains, crossing the U.S. border
in July, Ramos said.

‘Big Risk’

“I knew it was a big risk to make the journey, but the
threats were so real that I knew I had to risk my life to get my
daughter here,” she said in an interview at San Francisco City
Hall
.

Immigration attorneys say the situation has been made worse
by a June directive from Obama to accelerate action on the
cases, spurring a so-called Rocket Docket that began in July in
which juvenile cases are heard en masse and court dates are
scheduled earlier.

In a June 30 letter to Congress, Obama said he would steer
more immigration judges, attorneys and asylum officers to enable
“the prompt removal of individuals who do not qualify for
asylum or other forms of relief from removal.”

Tripled Caseload

The number of juvenile cases filed in San Francisco
Immigration Court almost tripled to 865 in the first nine months
of fiscal 2014 from three years earlier, according to a Sept. 2
analysis by the city’s Budget and Legislative Analyst’s office.
Cases with legal representation have declined as the caseload
surged in the last two years, according to the report.

“That’s why this has been such a crisis for us,” said Ana
Herrera, an immigration attorney at Dolores Street Community
Services in San Francisco. “There’s just no capacity for the
few pro-bono attorneys that exist in the city to attend court
with these kids.”

The odds of averting deportation are much better for those
with a lawyer, said a July 15 report released by Syracuse
University
in New York.

Courts allowed children to remain in the U.S. in 47 percent
of cases in which a lawyer represented them. Nine out of 10
children were ordered deported when they appeared alone without
representation, the report said.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Alison Vekshin in San Francisco at
avekshin@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Stephen Merelman at
smerelman@bloomberg.net
Jeffrey Taylor, Pete Young

Source Article from http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-18/san-francisco-moves-to-pay-for-kids-immigration-lawyers.html
San Francisco Moves to Pay for Kids’ Immigration Lawyers
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-09-18/san-francisco-moves-to-pay-for-kids-immigration-lawyers.html
http://news.search.yahoo.com/news/rss?p=immigration
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results
immigration – Yahoo News Search Results