USA Today
By Nicole Gaudiano
June 22, 2015
Sen.
Bernie Sanders called Friday for an aggressive push toward "humane and
sensible" immigration policies that keep families together.
Speaking
in Las Vegas before Latino policymakers, the Vermont independent and
presidential candidate said he would expand President Obama's "deferred
action" policy, granting
undocumented immigrants brought to the country as children temporary
protection from deportation.
Sanders
said deferred action should be offered to the parents of citizens,
parents of legal permanent residents and the parents of "DREAMers," a
term for young people
who grew up in the United States but lack legal status.
Obama's
attempts to expand the programs, which don't specifically protect the
parents of DREAMers, are being challenged in federal court.
"It
makes common sense to me, and I think all people of good will, that we
should be pursuing policies that unite families, not tear them apart,"
Sanders told the National
Conference of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials.
The
speech offered Sanders' most extensive comments yet about issues
concerning the Latino community since he announced his bid for the
Democratic presidential nomination
last month. Though he supported the 2013 comprehensive immigration
reform legislation, he has been criticized for not addressing such
issues in previous speeches.
Noting he is the son of a Polish immigrant, Sanders said the story of immigrants is "the story of America."
The
need for comprehensive immigration reform and an economy that benefits
all working people and not just a handful of billionaires are two major
issues facing this country,
he said. He said it's time to end discussion of "mass deportation and
self-deportation" and called for a "reasonable and responsible" path to
citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
"It
is not acceptable to me, and I think a growing majority of the American
people, that millions of folks in this country are working extremely
hard, but they are living
in the shadows, and this has got to end," he said.
Sanders
also called it "appalling" that "so many voices" last year insisted
that large numbers of unaccompanied minors at the U.S.-Mexico borders be
"turned away or simply
shipped back to their country of origin like a package marked return to
sender."
Last
year, Hillary Clinton, the apparent frontrunner for the Democratic
nomination, told CNN that unaccompanied minors "should be sent back as
soon as it can be determined
who responsible adults in their families are" but she said they should
be reunited with their families if possible. Clinton spoke at NALEO
Thursday.
Sanders
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."
Sanders
received periodic applause during his speech, which also touched on his
policy goals of raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour, addressing
youth unemployment,
guaranteeing health care as a right and offering tuition-free education
at American colleges and universities. He said he would pursue policies
that empower minority communities and end voter suppression.
"It
is only cowards who cannot defend their positions, who do everything
that they can to lower voter turnout and suppress the vote," he said.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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