New York Times
By Amy Chozick
May 5, 2015
For
months, Latino activists frustrated by President Obama’s inability to
overhaul the immigration system have pressed Hillary Rodham Clinton
about what she would do differently.
On
Tuesday, she tried to answer those pleas. At a campaign event here,
Mrs. Clinton, surrounded by children whose parents faced deportation,
called for a path to citizenship
for undocumented immigrants.
“We
have to finally, once and for all, fix our immigration system,” Mrs.
Clinton said at a round-table discussion at Rancho High School, where
roughly 70 percent of the
study body is Latino.
“It’s a family issue,” Mrs. Clinton said. “It’s an economic issue, too, but it is at its heart a family issue.”
She
said that she supported Mr. Obama’s executive actions on immigration
and that it was “foolish” to think the government could deport the
estimated 11 million people
who are living in the United States without papers.
She
also sharply criticized Republican presidential candidates who favor
granting legal status for some undocumented immigrants, but oppose citizenship.
“When they talk about ‘legal status,’ that is code for ‘second-class status,’” Mrs. Clinton said.
Many
Republicans have criticized Mr. Obama’s plans for an overhaul as
amnesty, a position the party’s conservative base shares. But candidates
must tread carefully.
Former
Gov. Jeb Bush of Florida, whose wife is from Mexico, has said he
supports a comprehensive immigration overhaul, but his aides have said
he prefers a path to legal
status.
Senator
Marco Rubio of Florida, a Republican who is of Cuban descent, has
backed away from his 2013 support for a comprehensive immigration
overhaul bill, saying he would
support a path to citizenship only if it followed tougher border
enforcement laws.
Many
of the students selected to participate in the discussion with Mrs.
Clinton have parents facing deportation, but they themselves are
eligible to apply for legal status.
Astrid Silva, a 26-year-old who arrived from Mexico at age 4 and who
Mr. Obama talked about in a televised immigration address in November,
moderated the panel.
Ms.
Silva and four of the other participants had been granted a stay from
deportation under Mr. Obama’s 2012 program, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, which Mrs.
Clinton said she supported.
She
also called for reform of immigration enforcement practices “so that
they’re more humane, targeted and effective” and for wholesale changes
to detention facilities,
which are privatized and, she said, often get paid per bed that is
filled.
In
her 2008 campaign, Mrs. Clinton won 63 percent of the Latino vote in
the 16 Super Tuesday contests, compared with 35 percent for Mr. Obama.
But since, she has been
a subject of scrutiny, as immigration activists have grown increasingly
frustrated with both parties.
Last
June, Mrs. Clinton told CNN that the Central American children who
crossed the Mexican border into the United States “should be sent back
as soon as it can be determined
who responsible adults in their families are,” a comment that angered
some young Latinos. (Mrs. Clinton later said that only those children
without a family connection in the United States or another legitimate
claim for asylum should be sent back.)
While
campaigning on behalf of Democrats ahead of the midterm elections last
year, Mrs. Clinton was dogged by young immigration activists to commit
to reform.
After
Democrats suffered significant losses in the midterm elections, Mr.
Obama moved forward later in November with executive actions to protect
millions of people from
being deported, but those initiatives have been held up by a federal
court.
Unlike
Mr. Obama, who vowed in his campaign to pass an immigration bill in his
first year in the White House, Mrs. Clinton would not commit to a firm
timeline. She pointed
to the 2008 financial crisis and all the unknowns of the Oval Office,
but reiterated her belief that “we are a nation of immigrants” and that
reform would be a high priority.
The speech played well among advocates for immigration reform who have been critical of Mrs. Clinton in the past.
“Wow.
Hillary Clinton just bear-hugged immigrants and the immigration issue
in a way that could shake up the entire 2016 race,” said Frank Sharry,
executive director of
America’s Voice, an advocacy group.
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Correction: May 5, 2015
An
earlier version of this article misidentified the speech in which Mr.
Obama mentioned Astrid Silva, an immigrant from Mexico who moderated a
panel discussion with Hillary
Rodham Clinton on Tuesday. It was a televised immigration address in
November, it was not the State of the Union.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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