Al Jazeera America
By Joshua Eaton
February 8, 2016
Eva
Castillo and her colleagues wait eagerly for presidential candidate
Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., to arrive for his speech at the New Hampshire
Institute of Politics.
The
lobby is packed with supporters waiting for a handshake or even a
signature. Suddenly, the doors swing open, and Rubio enters, followed by
a scrum of news cameras
and microphones.
As
Rubio makes his way down the rope line, Castillo gets ready. When he
finally reaches she, she swings into action. “Senator, you’re criticized
now by Sen. [Ted] Cruz
on immigration. He used to support immigration reform, but without a
path [to citizenship],” she tells Rubio, as a partner records the
exchange. “What are the differences between you and Sen. Cruz?”
“I don’t know anymore because he keeps changing his position on it,” Rubio responds.
“What’s your position?” she demands.
“My position is we’re going to enforce the law first, then we’ll see what the American people will support,” he says.
Rubio
quickly moves to the next person in line, a Cuban immigrant who also
asks him about immigration. When he repeats his line about enforcing
current laws, Castillo
can’t help interjecting. “Pero hay que pasar una reforma migratoria
para todos” (But you have to pass immigration reform for all), she says.
Castillo
moved to New Hampshire in 1982 from her native Venezuela. Now she’s the
New Hampshire organizer for the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee
Advocacy Coalition.
The job has made her practiced in chasing down presidential candidates
and getting them to go on the record on their immigration positions.
“Bird-dogging is an art,” she says, exuberant, after the testy exchange
with Rubio.
This
is Castillo’s third time pestering Rubio, with similar results. “It’s
the same, standard ‘We need to enforce the law.’ OK, and? He doesn’t say
anything, of course,”
she says. “But [we] got it [on video]. That’s what matters.”
New
Hampshire’s immigrant population, at just 5.5 percent, is less than
half the national average, according to the most recent data from the
U.S. Census Bureau. But across
the Granite State, a growing foreign-born population is making its
voice heard and trying to hold candidates accountable on issues like
immigration reform and foreign policy.
“Before,
yes, it was a white state,” Mary Georges, from the Democratic Republic
of Congo, says as she stands in the sanctuary of Raymond Baptist Church
in Raymond after
a panel on immigration reform. “But today it’s not really just a white
state. We’ve become a diverse state. Manchester is a big city. It can
change the politics because now there are a lot of immigrants.”
Georges,
58, is part of that change. She has lived in the U.S. for 25 years — 23
of them in Manchester. In November she became the first African
immigrant elected to a
municipal office in New Hampshire, when voters elected her to
Manchester’s school board. She pushes other African immigrants in
Manchester to pay attention to local and national politics, she says.
At
13.2 percent, Manchester’s immigrant population is more than twice the
state average, according to the most recent U.S. Census data. The
concentration of immigrants
and campaign events has made the Queen City a center for immigrant
activism — especially pushing candidates to clarify their positions on
immigration reform and foreign policy.
“This
year I didn’t do it … the bird-dog, but before, I’ve gone to do the
bird-dog. I like in New Hampshire, I like in Manchester, because I can
talk to any [presidential
candidate],” Georges says.
The
national conversation about immigration reform has focused on
undocumented Latino immigrants crossing over the U.S.-Mexico border. But
the issue is just as important
to immigrants from elsewhere around the world, according to Georges — a
sentiment echoed by other immigrants in New Hampshire who spoke with Al
Jazeera.
“We are here too — African, Asian, all of those, like the Bhutanese,” Georges says. “Everybody come to here.”
Paulette
Duclair, 51 of Raymond was also at the panel on immigration reform in
Raymond. She immigrated to the U.S. from Haiti 36 years ago. Now a U.S.
citizen, she helps
other Haitians in the area learn about the candidates and their
positions. Like Georges, Duclair emphasizes the importance of
immigration reform to her community. Those kinds of issues trump party
loyalty for Haitian immigrants, she says.
“Whoever’s
as close with our cause, that’s who we vote for,” she says. “We’re not
Democrats. We’re not Republicans. We’re not independents. We’re behind
the cause.”
The
immigration reform panel included local activists, clergy and
businesspeople from across the political spectrum. It was sponsored by
Granite Staters for Common Sense
Immigration Reform and Bibles, Business and Badges for Immigration
Reform. Many of the panelists focused on the benefits that immigration
reform — especially changes to the H-1B visa program — would have on New
Hampshire’s growing technology sector.
That
focus on the economy may be paying off. At a campaign stop in New
Hampshire last year, Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie,
the governor of New Jersey,
said he gets questions about immigration at every event, according to
Scott Spradling, a volunteer for Granite Staters. For Spradling, that
means the group is having an impact.
“To
me, that’s the finish line — having it be prioritized, having people
really scrutinize it,” he says. “I think that makes a difference.”
All
three Republican front-runners — Sen. Ted Cruz, Donald Trump and Sen.
Marco Rubio — are the children of immigrants. Cruz was born in Canada to
an American mother,
Eleanor Darragh, and a Cuban immigrant father, Rafael Cruz. Trump’s
mother, Mary Anne MacLeod, immigrated to the U.S. from Scotland after
meeting his father, Fred Trump. And both of Rubio’s parents, Mario Rubio
and Oriales Garcia, immigrated to the U.S. from
Cuba before Fidel Castro’s 1959 takeover.
All
three have put forward immigration platforms that focus on securing the
U.S.-Mexico border, stopping undocumented immigration and enforcing
current immigration laws.
Controversial remarks by Trump have dominated the headlines. He accused
undocumented Mexican immigrants of being rapists and drug dealers,
promised to end birthright citizenship if elected, called for
temporarily barring Muslims who are not U.S. citizens from
entering the country and said he would get Mexico to pay for a wall
along the United States’ southern border.
His
rhetoric on immigration has done little to hurt his campaign. Cruz won
Monday’s caucuses in Iowa, and Rubio’s poll numbers improved last week
in New Hampshire. But
Trump’s events regularly draw thousands of people across New Hampshire.
He has a solid 17-point lead in New Hampshire and an 8-point lead
nationally, according to Real Clear Politics’ averages of recent polls.
That
worries Ferguson Cullen, a former New Hampshire GOP chairman who has
endorsed Gov. John Kasich for the party’s nomination. Mitt Romney’s use
of immigration as a wedge
issue during the 2008 and 2012 Republican primaries isolated many
voters, according to Cullen. The party was beginning to rebound, he
says, before Trump hijacked the discussion.
There
are lessons learned from Romney’s experience, says Cullen. “If we want
to win elections, we have to attract people and not repel them,” he
says. “That was all doing
OK until Donald Trump came in and accused every Mexican of being a
criminal and a rapist. That was not constructive for the country.”
Happy in New Hampshire
Not
every issue that’s important to immigrant communities in New Hampshire
is making front-page headlines. Under the watchful gaze of a traditional
Buddha painting in
his living room, Suraj Budathoki, the executive director of the
International Campaign for Human Rights in Bhutan, speaks passionately
about his efforts to raise Bhutanese issues with presidential
candidates.
“Now
we are here in the United States, the most powerful country,” he says,
as his daughter Brianna, 4, plays with toys on a coffee table. “If it is
a guardian of human
rights and democracy, why is it not in Bhutan?”
His
family, from the Lhotshampa ethnic minority, fled Bhutan, a small
Buddhist kingdom in the Himalayas, when he was 9 years old. At least
100,000 other Lhotshampa fled
the country at the time, after the government claimed they were illegal
immigrants and stripped them of citizenship. After 20 years in a
refugee camp in Nepal, Budathoki immigrated to the U.S. and settled in
Manchester.
More
than 2,100 Bhutanese refugees have settled in New Hampshire since 2002,
with 977 of those making Manchester home, according to data from the
U.S. State Department.
About 600 members of New Hampshire’s Bhutanese community will be
eligible to vote in November, Budathoki says, including him. He will
vote in his first presidential primary on Tuesday.
The
Bhutanese community is active in other ways as well. Last year it got
the New Hampshire legislature to pass a resolution that recognizes the
contributions that Bhutanese
refugees make to the state and calls on the U.S. government to advocate
for human rights in Bhutan. He has lobbied Republican and Democratic
candidates to take a position on the issue.
It’s
a niche topic, and Budathoki says he hasn’t had much luck getting the
candidates to respond. But he plans to keep trying through the primary,
and he’s grateful to
live in a state where he has the opportunity to meet candidates
directly.
“If
I were in [Georgia] or some other state, I wouldn’t get these
opportunities,” he says. “So I’m very happy to be in New Hampshire. I’m
very thankful.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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