ThinkProgress
By Esther Yu-Hsi Lee
September 10, 2015
A
conservative Latino advocacy wants Republican presidential candidates
who espouse anti-immigrant rhetoric to know that they’ve gone too far.
The
LIBRE Initiative, a conservative Latino advocacy group funded by the
Koch brothers, issued “an open letter to all Americans” on Wednesday to
reject extreme immigration
proposals, like ending the practice of birthright citizenship and
insisting on mass deportation.
“Such
proposals are not in line with our principles and are not in the best
interest of the country,” Daniel Garza, executive director of the LIBRE
Initiative, wrote in
the letter. Garza stated that both policy proposals fail the “prudent
test” because it would “unduly intrude” on the lives of law-abiding
Americans and that the policies could “impose an unwarranted cost on the
taxpayers.”
“If
you’re somebody who’s proposing bad policies, we’re going to call you
out,” Garza told NPR in an interview. “Period, without regard to
political consequences, what
the political winds are. We are going to stand on sound ideas and sound
policy.”
The
LIBRE Initiative has been controversial in the Latino community for
some time. The group sponsors local services, like helping undocumented
immigrants obtain driver’s
licenses. LIBRE claims to support comprehensive immigration reform, but
Garza previously stated that President Obama’s executive action
granting deportation reprieve and work authorization for some
undocumented immigrants was “pandering” and “dangerous.”
Though
the LIBRE Initiative doesn’t call out specific candidates by name, both
of the initiatives they cite are at the heart of GOP frontrunner Donald
Trump’s immigration
policy plan. The plan has sparked intense reaction from Latino voters,
many of whom have personal ties to immigrants. A 2013 Latino Decisions
poll found that 85 percent of Latino undocumented immigrants have U.S.
citizen family members.
Trump’s
immigration rhetoric appeases some voters who want the government to
focus on deporting undocumented immigrants. In reality, it would cost
the government anywhere
between $400 billion to $600 billion to deport the country’s 11.3
million undocumented immigrants. Such a policy would also “shrink the
labor force by 11 million workers and reduce real GDP by $1.6 trillion,”
the conservative-leaning American Action Forum
indicated in a report.
Still,
Trump’s nativist rhetoric has had consequences, helping to spur some of
the most racially charged reactions against Latinos in the past few
months. In August, two
brothers brutally beat and urinated on a homeless Latino man,
reportedly telling the police that Trump “was right, all these illegals
need to be deported.” A Trump supporter told Univision anchor and U.S.
citizen Jorge Ramos to “get out of my country.” And
as the immigrant advocacy group America’s Voice has been updating in a
timeline, there have been various other incidents against Latinos in
recent days. Most recently, a man pulled the hair of a young immigrant
while another immigrant was spat on at a Trump
rally in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com



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