Washington Times
By Stephen Dinan
October 7, 2014
Stung
by President Obama’s on-again, off-again attitude on immigration, one
prominent activist is launching a Draft Gutierrez petition designed to
convince Rep. Luis V.
Gutierrez, an Illinois Democrat, to run for president in 2016 as an
independent.
The
Rev. Emma Lozano, who founded Centro Sin Fronteras in Chicago and has a
long history with Mr. Obama on immigration, said they are giving the
president until Thanksgiving
to take unilateral action halting deportations, and then they will
rally.
“We
will march and run our own Latino independent candidate for president
of the United States,” she said in an email announcing her plans to her
network of supporters.
She
is circulating a Draft Gutierrez petition form she is asking activists
to bring to the polls next month in order to get signatures showing
support for Mr. Gutierrez
to run as an independent.
Mr.
Gutierrez has served 11 terms in Congress as a Democrat, where he’s
made immigration his top issue, pushing for a new legalization program
and earning a dedicated
following from Hispanic activists.
Douglas Rivlin, a spokesman for Mr. Gutierrez, said his boss isn’t interested in a promotion to the White House.
“The
congressman is not running for president but he is flattered by the
thought expressed in the petition,” Mr. Rivlin said, adding that Mr.
Gutierrez is focused on preparing
immigrants to take advantage of whatever announcement Mr. Obama ends up
making later this year.
Still, Mr. Rivlin said Democrats have a challenge with voters.
“The
petition grows out of the anger, the frustration and the anxiety in the
immigrant community that he hears whenever he travels and talks to
Latino citizens and immigrants
who aspire to citizenship,” Mr. Rivlin said. “On the immigration issue
people want to know the Democrats have their backs and are more than
just ‘not Republicans’ on immigration.”
Ms. Lozano said she’s not giving Mr. Gutierrez an option.
“We’re
obligating him to run, we’re not asking him,” she told The Washington
Times. “We’re in a war and when you’re in a war you fight. We’re
drafting him.”
Ms.
Lozano has a long history with immigration, including helping arrange
sanctuary for Elvira Arellano, whom the federal government was fighting
to deport. She also has
battled Mr. Obama since his days in Chicago, and she says he and his
fellow Democrats need to be wary of losing Latino electoral support.
“The
Latino vote is going to be down this election because they’ve just
beaten us down,” she said. “There’s no reason to go out there and vote
for anyone.”
Still,
she said she’s telling people to register and try to find individual
candidates such as Mr. Gutierrez who are working on the issue.
Mr.
Obama promised during his 2008 campaign to sign an immigration bill
legalizing illegal immigrants in his first year in office, but instead
turned his attention to
health care, the economic stimulus and global warming.
Heading
into the 2012 election, and facing lethargy among Hispanic voters, he
vowed to try again on legislation — but also took unilateral action,
granting tentative legal
status to young adult illegal immigrants known as dreamers, in a policy
known as Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA. For years he
had denied he had that authority.
Following
re-election, he vowed to try again to win a bill in Congress, but again
denied he had power to halt deportations more broadly. After House
Republicans said they
wouldn’t act, Mr. Obama reversed himself and said he does have
authority, and vowed to act by the end of the summer. But as the summer
ended, Mr. Obama said he would delay once again, until after November’s
elections, fearing that his moves would be unpopular.
Ms. Lozano said Mr. Obama has been a disappointment.
“All we got was DACA for a few dreamers, and that’s not enough,” she said.
For
his part Mr. Gutierrez has said he expects Mr. Obama to follow through
on his promise to act between the election and the end of the year,
saying it will be a good
Christmas present for immigrants who could gain tentative legal status.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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