www.ImmigrationImpact.com
President Obama Calls on Congress for a "Fair, Practical and Promising
Way Forward" on Immigration Reform
This morning, President Barack Obama reaffirmed his dedication to comprehensive
immigration reform at the Esperanza USA National Hispanic Prayer Breakfast in
Washington, DC. "This promise means upholding America's tradition as a
nation of laws and a nation of immigrants," he said. The President also
gave a general outline of his immigration plan-ensuring employers don't exploit
low-income workers, requiring immigrants pay taxes, learn English and get in
line to naturalize.
Administration Begins Rolling Back Midnight Regulations Left by Bush
Administration
While a bill that would reform our immigration system waits in queue behind
other issues, like healthcare and climate change, the new Administration has
begun a good faith effort to right some of the most egregious wrongs left by
the former White House. Despite positive signs toward immigration reform--such
as Attorney General Eric Holder's reversal of Mukasey's decision, DHS's enforcement
focus on bad-seed employers and the suspension of the Bush administration's
"widow penalty," there is still much to be done.
Why Anti-immigrant Bills Fail at the State and Local Level
Congress's failure to pass comprehensive immigration reform has left many states
legislatures in the position of trying to deal with their new immigrant communities.
While some states and localities have pushed measures to integrate newcomers
into their communities, others have tried to enact harsh immigration-control
measures such as deputizing police to enforce immigration laws, requiring employers
to verify employment authorization through the flawed E-Verify program, and
denying public benefits to immigrants.
New Report Links Hate Crime and Anti-Immigrant Rhetoric
The Washington Post highlighted a report by civil rights leaders linking the
recent spike in hate crimes against Hispanics and people perceived to be immigrants
with inflammatory rhetoric present in the immigration debate. The report, published
by the Leadership Conference on Civil Rights Education Fund (LCCREF), looks
at FBI hate crime statistics and calls for a more civil discourse that informs
progress rather than "dehumanizing, racist stereotypes and bigotry"
that so often permeate the debate.
FAIR Takes Aim at Virginia's Immigrants and Children
In a new report, the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR)
claims that "Virginia's illegal immigrant population costs the state's
taxpayers nearly $1.7 billion per year for education, medical care and incarceration."
However, the statistical gymnastics in which FAIR engages to produce this number
render it virtually meaningless. FAIR dramatically exaggerates the fiscal "costs"
imposed by undocumented immigrants by including the schooling of their native-born,
U.S.-citizen children in its estimate and completely discounts the economic
role that undocumented workers play as consumers who help support Virginia businesses.
Assembly Line Injustice at Immigration Court
A new study by Appleseed, a non-profit organization focused on reforming the
American justice system, highlights the extent to which misguided deportation-only
strategies have led to a breakdown in our immigration court system. The study,
based on interviews with more than one hundred practitioners, academics, and
government officials, found that America's immigration courts are overwhelmed
by the number of cases flooding the system.