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Richardson withdraws commerce secretary bid |
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Gov names Labarga to Florida Supreme Court |
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Woman picked to head Latino Network |
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Texas legislators will push
new immigration laws |
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University wants to make public Pedro Pan records |
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Asking Neighbors to Vote in Defense of Families and Children
Commentary: The fight for immigrant rights is no longer about making
the best arguments; it's about convincing neighbors that the issue is
about families, children, human beings
By Rich Stolz, New America Media
TUCSON, Ariz. - Nov 2, 2006 - Fifteen residents, some of them
part-time paid canvassers, gathered in the front room of a modest house,
a temporary office, in central Tucson in mid-October. We were there for
a training session on the basics of door-to-door campaigning and to
learn more about four anti-immigrant Arizona propositions on the Nov. 7
ballot. Together we're on the front line of the pro-immigrant movement,
neighbors talking to neighbors about why it's time for caring people to
take a stand against hate and fear in American politics.
The canvassers and allied groups under the "Neighbors Working for
Immigrant Dignity," organized by the Campaign for Community Change, are
calling on more than 20,000 registered Latino voters and knocking on the
doors of 5,000 others who may or may not be Latino. We're identifying
their positions on these propositions and urging them to vote NO on
them. Every knock represents the hopes of millions who have been craving
a solution to the broken immigration system. Every knock is linked to
the expectations of those who wish to come out of the shadows and fully
live the dream they came to this country to achieve.
As new immigrant voters emerged from the grass-roots immigration
movement, so did new tactics to prevent them from exercising their
rights. Despite relentless efforts to keep out the immigrant vote,
groups all over the nation are mobilizing registered voters to speak up
for those who are unable to vote.
In Arizona, the stakes couldn't be higher. Proposition 300 would deny
access to child care services, adult basic education and in-state
tuition to undocumented immigrants. It punishes children and makes it
harder for parents to provide for them.
Proposition 100 would deny bail to undocumented immigrants. It labels
immigrants as criminals, overrides the discretion of judges and would
overcrowd jails.
Proposition 102 would deny punitive damages to undocumented immigrants.
It would give the worst abusers of people a free pass to exploit the
most vulnerable community members.
Proposition 103 would make English the official state language. The
Arizona Supreme Court ruled as unconstitutional more than a decade ago a
similar proposition that voters passed in 1988.
These mean-spirited proposals won't discourage migrants from crossing
the border, but they will have the effect of driving people already
living here deeper into the shadows.
In Central Orange County in California, 14,000 letters were mailed to
Latino voters warning them of incarceration or deportation if they
decided to vote. In an equally disgraceful manner, the U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services is proposing a series of measures that would
prevent countless immigrants from becoming U.S. citizens, including
increasing the application fee to more than $800.
These kinds of intimidation are only fueling pro-immigrant groups to
work even harder and ensure representation at the polls with strategic
get-out-the-vote efforts.
"Enough is enough," many of us thought as we gathered at the training
session in Tucson. The power rests in our hands. Expressing our
discontent through the pro-immigrant marches was just the beginning.
In their desperation to look tough on immigration, and by pandering to
score points with their voting base before elections, some national
legislators intentionally ignored the real issues. However, this
unwillingness to fix the nation's immigration system has resulted in the
people uniting in their desire to take action through civic
participation.
Walking up and down Palo Verde Boulevard in Tucson for one hour on a
Sunday afternoon, I personally talked with almost 30 registered voters,
in an economically diverse but mostly white community. Half the voters
on my walk list weren't home. But half of them were. Six voters
committed to vote NO on the anti-immigrant propositions. Two
fundamentally disagreed with me. Ten more were undecided but hadn't been
following the election at all.
In the toxic anti-immigrant political environment of Arizona, change
will begin when people talk to people, neighbors talk to neighbors, and
people take a stand for people they care about. It's no longer about
making the best argument. It's going to be about making our presence
known, reaching out to ordinary voters and making this an issue about
people, families, children and neighbors.
Rich Stolz is the Campaign for Community Change's Arizona director
and team leader of the Washington, D.C.-based CCC's immigration program.
IMMIGRATION MATTERS regularly features the views of the nation's leading
immigrant rights advocates. |