Huffington Post
By Elise Foley
June 19, 2015
After
being criticized for staying quiet about immigration, Sen. Bernie
Sanders (I-Vt.) vowed on Friday that if elected president, he would push
for immigration reform
and go even further than President Barack Obama in expanding
deportation relief.
"Despite
the central role that undocumented workers play in our economy and in
our daily lives, these workers are too often reviled by many for
political gain and shunted
into the shadows," Sanders, who is running for the Democratic
presidential nomination, said in Las Vegas at the National Association
of Latino Elected Officials conference.
"Let me be very clear as to where I stand," he continued. "It is time for this disgraceful situation to end."
Immigration
hasn't been one of Sanders' central issues, and he hasn't discussed it
much on the campaign trail. Rep. Luis Gutierrez (D-Ill.), one of the
leaders on immigration
reform in the House, said earlier this month that he doesn't know if
Sanders "likes immigrants, because he doesn't seem to talk about
immigrants."
"I
hope he likes immigrants," Gutierrez said at the time. "I haven’t heard
him say anything. He’s been kind of quiet and silent."
At
the NALEO conference, Sanders noted that he supported the comprehensive
immigration reform bill that passed the Senate in 2013, as well as the
never-passed Dream Act
to provide legal status to undocumented young people who came to the
U.S. as children.
Sanders
said that as president, if Congress did not pass immigration reform, he
would use executive action to give deportation relief to the parents of
U.S. citizens,
legal permanent residents and so-called Dreamers, the would-be
beneficiaries of the Dream Act.
Former
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former Maryland Gov. Martin
O'Malley, two of Sanders' rivals for the Democratic nomination, have
also promised to push for
immigration reform and expand deportation relief if necessary.
Obama
announced plans last November to allow some parents of U.S. citizens
and legal permanent residents to work legally on a temporary basis, but
he excluded the parents
of Dreamers, saying that such a move was beyond his authority. The
relief program is currently blocked in the courts.
Sanders
has previously criticized certain aspects of immigration reform efforts
-- particularly guest worker programs that he said could cost Americans
their jobs and
lead to lower wages.
He
spoke out against proposals for guest worker programs on Friday, too,
but focused more on the exploitation of immigrants who "have been
routinely cheated out of wages,
held virtually captive by employers who have seized their documents,
forced to live in unspeakably inhumane conditions and denied medical
benefits for on-the-job injuries."
Sanders
said another of his priorities is to ensure that workers are not
exploited by employers who think their undocumented status will prevent
them from speaking out.
He recalled a visit to Immokalee, Florida, in 2008, where he said he
saw workers in tomato fields "being paid starvation wages, living in
severely substandard housing and subjected to abusive labor practices."
"The
injustice in the lives of the workers was overwhelming," he said. "In
fact, the situation was so bad that on the day I visited, two men were
indicted for human slavery.
Slavery, in the 21st century, in the United States of America."
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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