Latin Times
By Cedar Attanasio
October 16, 2015
If
you want to know what pro-immigrant voters are looking for in a
presidential candidate, read former Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley’s
8-page immigration plan. It reads
a laundry list of immigrant activist demands, and goes far beyond the
comparatively timid pledges of O’Malley’s democratic primary rivals,
Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt) and former Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton. Healthcare for undocumented immigrants, an
overhaul of the U.S. Border Patrol, enshrining sanctuary cities,
erasure of punitive immigration laws, and an end to Obama’s Priority
Enforcement Program.
That
advocacy has won O’Malley the praise of leading voices in the Latino
community, including Hispanic Chamber of Commerce CEO Javier Palomarez,
who sounded off on the
immigration to to MSNBC’s Chris Hayes on Thursday.
“Frankly,
the best plan I’ve seen -- and I’ve had plenty of time to speak to all
of the candidates -- is from Martin O’Malley,” Palomarez said. “He has
put forward a robust
plan for how we move forward, and how we begin to fix this immigration
system that’s been broken for some time now.”
All
three top Democratic candidates agree on a pathway to citizenship for
the 11 million immigrants in the country illegally, and want to create
outreach programs to increase citizenship rates among permanent residents. Yet O’Malley’s plan goes
even further, and gets into specifics
For
example, he proposes eliminating 3-to-10-year bars on green card
applications, an automatic punishment currently imposed on immigrants
caught in the country illegally.
He’s also offered an overhaul of the scandal-ridden Border Patrol, and
changing a key element of the immigration courts: access to attorneys.
Unlike
criminal defendants, immigrants facing deportation don’t have access to
lawyers. Those who can’t afford an attorney or fail to court pro bono
representation face
an overwhelming disadvantage in the legal system.
Immigrant
advocates have criticized Clinton for supporting the expedited removal
of unaccompanied minors without legal representation. She’s since
backpedaled on those
statements somewhat, characterizing the influx of unaccompanied minors
in 2014 as a unique “crisis.”
“I
think they certainly deserve lawyers to make their case for asylum for
them,” O’Malley said of unaccompanied minors, speaking to the Latin
Times in September at a campaign
event in Los Angeles.
His plan was released in July. You can read it here.
Palomarez
wasn’t the first Latino influencer to sound off on O’Malley’s plan.
Latino Rebels listed O’Malley’s immigration plan in an article
describing him as the candidate
that had “taken the lead on Latino issues.” Jorge Ramos even gave it a
nod.
However,
some of O’Malley’s proposals might meet the very definition of
pandering, in that they seek to satisfy demands of a particular group
without being reasonable
(not in the sense that they are insincere).
Take
the idea to expand Obamacare subsidies to immigrants in the country
illegally. Such a proposal would validate the as-of-yet unjustified
fears of nativists, further
eroding support for comprehensive reform.
But at least the former Governor's proposals are clearly spelled out.
By
contrast, former Secretary Clinton barely mentioned immigration on her
website until a month ago, when her team expanded her immigration page
to four comparatively
vague bullet points, just in time for Hispanic Heritage month.
While
Clinton has expanded on those answers in interviews, her pledges have
been nonspecific. On one hand, this may be a strategy to help her
competitiveness in the general
election; to reduce the amount of fodder available to a hypothetical
Republican opponent. On the other hand, lack of specificity has turned
of the press and emboldened immigration activists.
O’Malley,
52, has said himself that he’s running “to offer a generational
alternative.” But can O’Malley’s idealistic, pro-immigrant policies also
offer a winning alternative?
Let us know what you think in the comments below.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
No comments:
Post a Comment