MSNBC
By Alex Seitz-Wald
June 19, 2015
Sen.
Bernie Sanders made his pitch to a group of Latino elected leaders here
Friday, and took an apparent veiled dig at Hillary Clinton, who spoke
here the day before.
Sanders,
who comes for a state that is nearly 95% white, rarely talks about
immigration on the stump. But he spent about 20 minutes here laying out
his vision for reform.
He
told the story of his father, a penniless immigrant from Poland who
raised two sons that went to college, and said that his story and that
of many others in the room
“is the story of America.”
Sanders
called for comprehensive immigration reform with a pathway to
citizenship and said he wanted to expand on the executive actions taken
by President Obama to extend
deportation relief to million of undocumented immigrants.
That puts him in line with Hillary Clinton, who at an event here last month called for upholding Obama’s actions and doing more.
But he also took an apparent dig at Clinton without mentioning her by name.
“It
was appalling to me that last year when the papers were full of
discussion of the large numbers of unaccompanied children at the borders
there were so many voices
insisting they be turned away or simply shipped back to their country
of origin like a package marked return to sender,” he said.
“America
has always been a haven for the oppressed. Is there any group more
vulnerable than children? We cannot and must not shirk the historic role
of the United States
as a protector of vulnerable people fleeing persecution,” the
presidential candidate continued.
Last
year, during the Southern Border Crisis, Clinton rankled immigration
activists by saying Latin American children turning up at the border
needed to be “sent back.”
“They
should be sent back as soon as it can be determined who responsible
adults in their families are,” Clinton said during a CNN town hall as
part of her book tour.
“We have so to send a clear message, just because your child gets
across the border, that doesn’t mean the child gets to stay. So, we
don’t want to send a message that is contrary to our laws or will
encourage more children to make that dangerous journey.”
Sanders
has his own complicated record on immigration, including past
opposition to a guest worker program. But in the face of united
Republican opposition, almost all
Democrats are on the same page today.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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