Buzzfeed News
By Adria Carrasquillo
May 4, 2015
Just
days before Hillary Clinton announced her campaign for president, her
political director Amanda Renteria was working the phone, talking to
Hispanic business leaders
as well as national immigration advocates.
One
of the calls was with Erika Andiola, a high-profile DREAMer activist
who spoke with Renteria about what she wants to see from the campaign so
the community she represents
knows Clinton is serious about changing immigration policy, Andiola
said.
Clinton’s
first 2016 foray into proving her immigration bonafides to activists
will begin on Tuesday at a roundtable event at Rancho High School in Las
Vegas, where she
is expected to affirm her support for a path to citizenship for
undocumented immigrants, say she supports the president’s executive
actions, and call out the Republican field for their shortcomings on the
issue, sources familiar with the event told BuzzFeed
News.
Clinton
will meet with DREAMers, undocumented youth brought to the country as
children, who have benefitted from Obama’s 2012 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program, which gives them work authorization for two years and protects
them from deportation, as well as undocumented parents of U.S. citizens who would benefit from Obama’s 2014 executive actions, which are
currently on hold pending legal proceedings.
The
publicly announced event, her first in Nevada, the third state in the
Democratic nominating process, will come after a private meeting with 12
local Hispanic leaders
and activists, and before a fundraiser at the home of Brian Greenspun,
who runs the Greenspun Media Group (which includes the Las Vegas Sun,
Las Vegas Weekly, and Las Vegas Magazine).
BuzzFeed
News spoke with nearly a dozen national immigration leaders about what
they want to hear as Clinton begins rolling out an immigration platform.
The
varied group — which included establishment leaders close to Democrats,
DREAMers and undocumented workers, and leaders with ties to the faith
and business communities
— were nearly unanimous in their belief that while the ultimate goal is
a legislative overhaul, Clinton must go further if she hopes to create a
contrast between her campaign and Republicans like Jeb Bush and Marco
Rubio, who are also calling for changes to
immigration law.
“I
want to hear, ‘In my first year, immigration reform is getting done and
it’s getting done well,’” said Angelica Salas, from the Coalition for
Humane Immigrant Rights
of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), who often visited with the White House during
the 2014 run up to the executive actions.
Janet
Murguia, president of National Council of La Raza (NCLR), who made
waves last year after calling Obama the “deporter-in-chief,” said that
until Congress acts, the
Latino community expects the next president to not only commit to
making immigration legislation a priority, but to “expending political
capital to achieve immigration reform.”
“For
us, it means placing it at the top of her legislative agenda, working
with Congress to broaden pathways for people to work and providing an
accessible path to citizenship for longterm residents,” she said.
Activists
echoed Murguia’s thoughts, and said they learned their lessons from
Obama — who campaigned on making immigration a top priority in 2008 and
2012, but was unable
to get it done. This is why Clinton should lean into the issue, they
argue. They are ultimately hoping for the type of emphatic attention she
devoted to criminal justice issues last week, and the signal that the
issue will be a campaign priority, in a speech
at Columbia University.
“What
would get me to put a Hillary sticker on my car is if she said the
president’s executive actions didn’t go far enough and didn’t exercise
the totality of discretion,”
said one activist whose organization has hit Clinton for her public
comments on immigration.
Two
sources familiar with Tuesday’s event told BuzzFeed News that Clinton
will stress support for a legislative overhaul and a path to citizenship
and will ask students
about how DACA is working — what is good about the program and what
could be done better. But she may also ask about what more a president
could do if Congress once again fails to pass legislation, suggesting
that she is open to further executive action on
immigration, which would delight activists who have seen legislation
die in Congress too often to be excited about general calls for
“immigration reform” from candidates.
“If
she needs to act on her own or continue that program she’s keeping
those options available to her,” said Andres Ramirez, a 20-year Nevada
Democratic strategist.
And Clinton’s early plan to meet with undocumented immigrants already checks a box activists have called for.
“She
should meet with undocumented people, look them straight in the eye and
tell them ‘I’m not going to deport you,’” said Pablo Alvarado,
executive director of the National
Day Laborer Organizing Network (NDLON). “And tell them ‘I’m going to go
beyond DACA and DAPA.’”
Republicans
like Bush and Rubio have laid out positions further from other
candidates in their party. At a meeting with Hispanic evangelicals in
Houston, Texas last week,
Bush said he supports earned legal status for undocumented immigrants.
Ali
Noorani, executive director of the National Immigration Forum, which
works with business, law enforcement, and faith leaders, was at the
conference in Houston last
week. Noorani told BuzzFeed News that pastors and evangelicals have
been active on the issue of family detention, something also repeatedly
mentioned by other immigrant leaders.
“One of the programs that is one of the Obama administration’s scars is their return to using family detention,” Noorani said.
He
said at their core, conservative faith communities are about family and
they’re against detaining families “in the middle of nowhere.” And on
the law enforcement side,
they feel like they’re caught in the middle between an “overzealous
federal government focused on enforcement” and a community that wants to
be able to trust its local police chief.
Here,
Cristina Jiménez, managing director of United We Dream (UWD), said she
hopes Clinton makes the connection between wanting to end the “era of
mass incarceration”
as she said last week and detentions that impact immigrants.
“This is the same system that is funneling immigrants and families into detention,” she said.
Andiola,
whose organization, the Arizona-based Dream Action Coalition, is
releasing a memo Monday detailing what it wants from presidential
candidates, said in her state
embattled Sheriff Joe Arpaio still coordinates with immigration
authorities, something activists want to see end. She wants to hear
Clinton speak out on this issue, as well.
A
source familiar with Clinton’s message Tuesday said she will use it as
an opportunity to lay out the areas like a pathway to citizenship and
support for Obama’s executive
actions where Republicans “either have not or can not go because of
their party’s politics.”
“From
day one, this campaign has taken our outreach to the Latino community
as a top priority from senior staff to junior organizers,” Renteria told
BuzzFeed News in an
email. “Hillary Clinton has a lifelong record as a champion on issues
important to the Latino community and she’s been hearing ideas from
folks involved in the immigration battle to figure out what are the next
steps for the nation.”
The
RNC mobilized on the Nevada event Sunday night, arguing that Clinton is
a flip-flopper who now supports licenses for undocumented immigrants
after opposing them in
what is considered a high-profile 2008 misstep.
Frank
Sharry, who has worked closely with Democrats and the Obama
administration on immigration for years said he had been worried that
Clinton comes from a time in Democratic
Party politics when immigration was used as a wedge issue, dividing
Democrats and mobilizing conservatives. He also pointed to her early
comments last year when she was confronted by Andiola in Iowa about
immigration and said Americans need to “elect more
Democrats,” as well as when Clinton angered activists by saying the
Central American children who crossed the border last summer should be
given love but many should ultimately be sent back.
“It was like, ‘Oh, god, we’re going to party like it’s 1996,’” he said.
Sharry
was encouraged when she tweeted her support for Obama’s executive
actions and her change on supporting driver’s licenses, however. He said
she should lean in to
immigration after the failure in the 2014 midterms, where Democrats
like Mark Udall have been criticized for avoiding immigration. “This is
now an issue that wedges Republicans and mobilizes Democrats,” he said.
Eddie
Escobedo Jr., the son of longtime Latino activist and Clinton
supporter, Eddie Escobedo, who died in 2010, will be at the private
event with Hispanic leaders Tuesday,
as well as the fundraiser later in the day. When his 21-year-old son
died suddenly three months ago, Clinton sent him a handwritten note.
For
his part, he said he will carry a message that her support for a
pathway to citizenship is good, along with her support for the executive
actions. But he also echoed
other activists who want to see the legal immigration system fixed,
something that has personally come into focus for him. His sister-in-law
did everything the right way, he said, but has been on a waiting list
for five years and expects to wait another six
years.
NDLON’s
Alvarado said that for years Democrats have been able to use
immigration as an issue to bash Republicans, but Clinton should position
herself to seize the opportunity
to get it done.
“This
is the moment for Hillary to be clear and come forward and decide if
she wants the issue or the accomplishment,” he said. “She can start
right now shaping that legacy
and I think it would be a great legacy for her to end deportations and
make sure the 11 million undocumented have a path to equality, full
rights, and citizenship to its full extent.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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