Latino Rebels (Opinion)
By Hector Luis Alamo
October 22, 2015
You
only need one word to describe how Latinos feel about the Obama
administration. That’s a lie; you need two: frustration and
disappointment. Latino voter turnout in
the presidential elections of 2008 and 2012 were never more than 50
percent, but the over 70 percent of Latinos who did vote in both years
were led to believe that finally passing fair and comprehensive
immigration reform would be President Obama’s top priority.
We
all know what followed. With Democratic majorities in both chambers of
Congress in 2009 and 2010, the White House decided to tackle other
crises — an economy in free
fall, the tens of millions of Americans without health care — while
immigration reform was put on the back burner. Then, in the 2010 midterm
elections, a right-wing wave came crashing down on the country,
shrinking the Democratic majority in the Senate and
giving the Republicans control of the House of Representatives. Since
then it has been obstruction and little else, with the GOP refusing to
give Obama and the Democrats an inch even when the other side seems
willing to give up a yard. The president has deported
immigrants at record numbers each year. Immigrants and their supporters
called on him to stop. He said he couldn’t do anything about it, that
he was only following Congress’s orders. The GOP failed (or refused) to
come up with an alternative immigration plan.
So Obama was forced to give in to his base, signing an executive order
that would protect four million undocumented immigrants from
deportation.
That’s
the official story, or at least the common perception, in which
immigration reform was practically doomed from the start. It’s a story
of false promises, false
government and false hope.
But
a new documentary by Frontline and Independent Lens looks to turn that
belief on its head by showing how unbelievably close Congress came to
passing immigration reform
in the summer of 2014. In Immigration Battle, filmmakers Michael
Camerini and Shari Robertson track the behind-the-scenes negotiations in
Congress that were hidden from the public so the leaders of both
parties could save face in the meantime. The film spans
two years, beginning with an immigration reform rally in front of the
Capitol the day after Obama won reelection in November 2012, and ending
with the president’s November 2014 executive order limiting
deportations.
Specifically,
the documentary follows the effort in the House to pass an immigration
bill approved by the Senate in June 2013. From that moment on the clock
is ticking,
as reformers on both sides of the aisle race to secure a bipartisan
agreement while conditions are ripe. And conditions are ripe: the GOP
cannot afford to continue alienating a growing Latino electorate, and
the Democrats can’t expect to maintain their support
among Latino voters if they keep failing to pass immigration reform.
Fed up, Latinos may simply choose to vote for neither party, granting
the electoral edge to Republicans.
The
David in this story is Luis Gutiérrez, the Puerto Rican firebrand from
Illinois who in recent years has become the clear leader on immigration
reform in the House
of Representatives, as scrappy as he is diminutive. After Robertson
runs through Gutiérrez’s personal history, Camerini explains, “He makes
his own political party nervous. He’s made it clear he’s more loyal to
immigrants than he is to Democrats.” Then, in
one of the countless moments that blur the line between documentary and
campaign ad, Robertson adds, “To Republicans who want to do immigration
reform, he’s the Democrat they trust.”
As
a Puerto Rican from Chicago myself, I’ve always wondered whether
Gutiérrez would ever run for higher office. His problem in that regard, I
believed (and kind of still
do), was that his politics were too liberal, that he couldn’t get
enough conservative or independent votes to ever run for the Senate,
much less the presidency. Whether it was the filmmakers’ intention or
not, Immigration Battle tries to soften the congressman’s
partisan image and instead shows him to be a bridge builder whose
bridges are constantly set fire to by other people, even the leaders of
his own party.
The
Goliath to Gutiérrez’s David is a composite of Tea Party radicals,
domineering party leaders and the Obama administration, each of whom
have their own motives for
wanting to derail the Gutiérrez’s drive. Right-wingers believe the
country to be in the midst of an invasion across its southern border;
Obama and Democratic leaders seem unwilling to support an immigration
campaign led by someone else, whether Democrat or
not; and Speaker John Boehner appears caught between appeasing the
radical fringe in his party and not conceding too much electoral support
to the Democrats. In the midst of the madness, Gutiérrez is depicted as
merely a humble public servant trying to win
justice for as many of the 11 million undocumented immigrants in this
country as he can.
I’m
not suggesting Congressman Gutiérrez isn’t worthy of such praise. And
I’m not arguing that documentarians should be unbiased, which is
impossible for anyone with a
pulse. Still, my eyes can’t help rolling in their sockets whenever any
public figure is lionized, especially by people pretending to be
objective. No one is perfect, after all, so it’s safe to assume that
immigration reform ultimately failed not only due to
GOP opposition and White House machinations, but also due to missteps
made by Gutiérrez himself. That is simply the nature of politics and
being human.
Notwithstanding
its rose-colored portrayal of one crusading congressman, Immigration
Battle makes an excellent attempt to unpack something most of us already
know but
don’t fully appreciate — which is that the debate in Congress over
immigration reform has less to do with ideologies than it does politics.
The “battle” is really an ugly, tense dance between two parties hoping
to step in sync, at least for a moment, though
they’re moving to different music. They came close in June 2014 —
painfully close — but at the last minute the GOP’s music changed and the
two sides began stepping on each other’s toes again.
The
moral of the story, at least according to me, is that something must be
done about gerrymandering. Allowing political parties to draw up safe
districts for themselves
leaves us with a House of Representatives whose members have everything
to lose by working across the aisle. There are more Republicans willing
to work on immigration reform than the media and the Democratic
leadership would have us believe, but they run the
risk of being primaried by a more radical candidate should they appear
too moderate or too collegial with the opposing party. This setup
creates in Congress an even bigger tug of war than already exists,
making it nearly impossible for both parties to put
down the rope and meet in the middle when it’s time to pass much-needed
reforms.
Immigration
Battle is a heartbreaking film, but it’s also heartwarming. Despite the
many obstacles to cooperation, there are still members of Congress —
Democrats and
Republicans — who, out of either compassion or a rational assessment of
the situation, are reaching across the political chasm to get
government working properly again.
Congressman
Mick Mulvaney, a South Carolina Republican elected as part of the
right-wing surge in 2010, is a case in point. Speaking at a gathering of
Republican voters
in Goose Creek in the spring of 2014, Mulvaney boldly made the case for
why his party must act on immigration:
At
some point we’re going to have to figure out: if you take the entire
African American community and write them off, take the entire Hispanic
community and write them
off, take the entire libertarian community and write them off, take the
entire gay community and write them off, what’s left? About 38 percent
of the country. You cannot win with 38 percent of the country.
We
need to stop celebrating the absurd in our party, and stop rewarding
the outrageous and the stupid. We have to figure out how to deal with it
as a party. We’re losing
too many elections. We’re writing off too many people.
There
are people on the other side, even on the far end, who understand that
Congress cannot continue with politics as usual. There are Republicans
who realize that the
country is changing, that the definition of what means to be an
American is expanding, and they want to see their party evolve to meet
these new realities. This is the silver lining in the dark cloud hanging
over Congress and the light at the end of the tunnel
with which Immigration Battle concludes.
Should
all else fail, demographics will grease the rusty gears of government
and see that immigration reform (and other reforms) is finally passed.
Till then, the political
dance continues.
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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