Archive for June, 2017

Son of immigration activist who sought sanctuary in Chicago church to graduate high school – Chicago Tribune

Saul Arellano gets a boost every time a stranger recognizes him on the street, pinches his cheeks and calls him "Saulito." It reminds him of the Chicago community that raised him, and what he owes them and his country.

A decade ago, Saul's mother, Elvira Arellano, became a lightning rod in the nation's immigration debate when she sought sanctuary in a Humboldt Park church while fighting her second deportation back to Mexico. Her son, born in the U.S., has joined her as an immigration advocate, serving as a symbol of why so many people live in the U.S. illegally to find better opportunities for their children.

After his mother was deported in 2007, young Saul who went to live with her in Mexico took up her mantle, traveling back and forth between the U.S. and Mexico, lobbying for immigration reform. In 2014, Elvira Arellano returned to the U.S. illegally with Saul and his then-infant brother. Crossing the border a third time to secure a brighter future for her sons was worth the risk, she said.

On Friday, Saul Arellano is set to fulfill his mother's dream of seeing her son graduate from high school. He hopes to attend Northeastern Illinois University in the fall with tuition provided by an unexpected donor. He plans to pursue a career fighting for justice.

"People actually believe in what we're doing," said Saul Arellano, now 18. "That's all I need, just one person who believes that I'm doing something right."

Saul was born in 1998 in Yakima, Wash., where his mother first went to live and work with her cousins, one year after she was first deported for crossing the U.S.-Mexico border.

Saul came with his mother to Chicago more than two years later. She got a job cleaning at O'Hare International Airport and bought a house. After the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, federal agents came to her home at dawn as part of Operation Tarmac, a nationwide sweep of airport employees living in the U.S. illegally.

In addition to re-entering the country illegally after a prior deportation, Elvira Arellano had been working with a fake Social Security number. She fought every turn of her case and won at least three stays of deportation. But in August 2006, instead of showing up at the Department of Homeland Security for removal, she stepped up to the pulpit of Adalberto United Methodist Church in the Humboldt Park neighborhood, vowing to stay in the church indefinitely with her son.

The move catapulted the mother and son to the front lines of an international debate. Critics of illegal immigration believed Elvira Arellano was using her son to justify staying in the U.S. and exploiting him by putting him before TV cameras and politicians.

During news conferences, 7-year-old Saul stood at his mother's side, playing with his action figures. He missed his own bed and the Nintendo game he left behind at their home in Pilsen, he said.

Still, whenever Elvira Arellano proposed giving up and going to Mexico, young Saul said no. He wanted to stay and become a Chicago firefighter. "I want to help people," he told the Tribune in 2007.

Beti Guevara, the assistant pastor of the church where the Arellanos took refuge, said the year living inside Adalberto robbed Saul of some of his childhood. He lashed out, often kicking and punching anyone who came near his mother. Guevara relied on the nearby Union League Boys & Girls Club as an outlet for his pent-up angst.

"This kid lived in fear," said Guevara. "The only relief he had was the Boys & Girls Club. I snuck him through the back door and then he became a kid."

Unlike his mother, Saul could come and go from the church freely. He attended second grade at Cooper Elementary School in Pilsen and went to occasional sleepovers. The child spoke at immigration reform rallies outside the White House, and in Los Angeles, Boston and Miami. He went to Mexico City to address the Mexican parliament, which adopted a resolution opposing the U.S. effort to deport his mother.

In August 2007, a year after taking sanctuary in the church, Elvira Arellano was arrested in Los Angeles, where she and Saul had traveled for an immigration reform rally. Because of her prior deportation and the attention her case had drawn, she was deported that same day. Saul joined her to live in Mexico a month later, after attending a number of other immigration reform rallies around the country.

As the mother and son's activism continued in Mexico, Elvira Arellano dodged gunfire at rallies, received death threats and locked the doors of her home in Michoacan to prevent kidnappers from taking Saul, she said. Saul's classmates in the southwestern Mexican state spoke wistfully of life in America, he said. But the hatred he says he has experienced here did not match what they imagined.

In 2014, Elvira Arellano escorted a group of Central American asylum seekers to the U.S. border and encouraged them to cross. She called her then teenage son Saul and suggested he join her in doing the same. They both crossed the border and were detained. As a U.S. citizen, he was released right away. His mother, having crossed the border illegally a third time, was released a few days later pending a ruling on her asylum.

They returned to Humboldt Park where the largely Puerto Rican community had rallied around them years earlier.

Saul enrolled in Pedro Albizu Campos High School, a charter school affiliated with the Puerto Rican Cultural Center. It was Virginia Boyle's first year teaching at the school. Saul remembers in the six weeks left of his freshman year, she assigned him 10 novels to help perfect his English and give him some perspective.

She immediately recognized his drive to succeed and create a better world.

"Even then he knew that his life was different and that he was actually living his own life, but that he was playing a role in a larger social drama," said Boyle, who has taught him off and on ever since and still serves as one of his mentors. "That involved his mother, of course, but involved so many issues immigration, family separation, policy. Saul, of course with his mother, was right there alongside all of that."

Later, because he kept up his grades, Saul was part of a select cohort of students invited to take advanced placement exams, for which Boyle helped him prepare. He earned 12 units of college credit.

Saul has remained an activist both alongside his mother and on his own.

The day after the inauguration of President Donald Trump who has said illegal immigration endangers public safety and has vowed a crackdown Saul joined a student walkout during the school day. In April, he protested Trump's immigration policies on Capitol Hill with more than a dozen other Chicago-area children, all U.S. citizens, who have a parent who has been deported or is at risk of deportation.

"I feel this is our calling," Saul said. "We all have a reason why we're here. I strongly believe we're setting ourselves up to do better. I'm hoping in the future I can do way better."

Saul said he has struggled to balance the demands of being a student and an activist with helping his mother pay the bills and raise his 3-year-old brother Emiliano, a Mexican citizen, who, like his mother, has a pending application for asylum. Saul holds down multiple part-time jobs waiting tables at a seafood restaurant and mentoring 5-, 6- and 7-year-olds with their homework at the Boys & Girls Club.

Hector Perez, vice president of club services for Union League Boys &Girls Club, said many kids Saul's age are often on their phones, hanging out, having a good time.

"You don't see Saul doing any of that," Perez said. "He's so mature. ... He's got a really powerful message of not giving up the fight for your rights and stand for what you believe in."

That work ethic is what led Jim and Ginger Meyer to make an offer Saul could not refuse. Earlier this spring, Saul competed for a college scholarship from the Boys & Girls Club that he did not win. But the Meyers were so moved by his story that they offered to cover tuition at the college of his choice.

"He's a role model," said Ginger Meyer, whose husband, Jim, is on the board of the Boys & Girls Club. "We are just helping someone who is doing something much bigger. He's already given so much to our country through what he has done in the Boys & Girls Club. ... This is what we would want from all of our citizens."

After a three-year wait, Elvira Arellano presents her case for asylum to an immigration judge this September. If she loses, she will have to leave her older son behind.

"Saul has a lot of dreams to study at the university," she said in Spanish through a translator. "He's independent. I don't have to worry as much for him."

Saul does not want her to give up the fight. He wants his brother to have the same opportunities.

"I've come to realize everything my mom has told me was right," he said. "Everything she fought for was right. She did it for me."

mbrachear@chicagotribune.com

Twitter @TribSeeker

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Son of immigration activist who sought sanctuary in Chicago church to graduate high school - Chicago Tribune

Do You Have A First Amendment Right To Follow President’s Twitter Account? – CBS Miami


CBS Miami
Do You Have A First Amendment Right To Follow President's Twitter Account?
CBS Miami
But just as seemingly everything Trump does and says sparks controversy, so too is the president's prolific and unpredictable use of Twitter, as one reporter called it, raising a novel question of constitutional law: Is there a First Amendment right ...
It doesn't take much for Trump to block you on TwitterCNN
First Amendment Group Threatens to Sue Trump for Blocking Twitter TrollsAccuracy In Media (blog)
1st Amendment Lawyers Tell Trump to Un-Block Twitter UsersNBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
TIME -TIME -Politico
all 624 news articles »

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Do You Have A First Amendment Right To Follow President's Twitter Account? - CBS Miami

Of course Hillary Clinton is a ‘Wonder Woman’ fan – USA TODAY

Hillary Clinton said that 'Wonder Woman' sounds "right up my alley."(Photo: ANGELA WEISS, AFP/Getty Images)

Add Hillary Clinton to the growing list ofWonder Womanfans, because she finds the hero... relatable.

"NoI haven't seenWonder Womanyet, but I'm going to, in part because it's directed by the fabulous Patty Jenkins," Clinton said in a video at Women In Film's Crystal + Lucy Awards Tuesday."But something tells me that a movie about a strong, powerful woman fighting to save the world from a massive international disaster is right up my alley."

Clinton's taped message aired in the Beverly Hilton, as a way to help presentthe Crystal Award or Excellence in Filmto actor/director andlongtime Clinton supporterElizabeth Banks, whom Clinton called "such a special person, onscreen and off." Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., also praised Banks in a video message, calling her "a great friend and incredible role model."

Banks was feted along with actress Zoey Deutch, director Mira Nair, Sony Pictures Classics co-founders Michael Barker and Tom Bernard, journalist Dan Rather and actress Tracee Ellis Ross.

The latter honoree had her own A-list video message, too, from Michelle Obama.

"You are brilliant, you're hilarious, you're one of the most talented actors I know and your character onBlack-ish, Bow, is an inspiration for folks all across this country. And the work you're doing offscreen is just as remarkable," Obama said to Ross, who took homethe Lucy Award for Excellence in Television. "Congratulations, again, on this well-deserved honor. See you on the dance floor."

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Of course Hillary Clinton is a 'Wonder Woman' fan - USA TODAY

Report: 3 Members of Special Counsel Mueller’s Team Donated to Dems, Including Hillary, Obama – Breitbart News

Three members of Special Counsel Robert Muellers team made the donations to Democrats, including to Hillary Clintons presidential campaign, according to a CNN analysis using Federal Election Commission records. CNN reported:

More than half of the more than $56,000 came from just one lawyer and more than half of it was donated before the 2016 election, but two of the lawyers gave the maximum $2,700 donation to Hillary Clinton last year. Over the weekend, news outlets including CNN identified five attorneys that Mueller has already brought on board to help investigate potential collusion between associates of President Donald Trumps campaign and Russia.

The attorneys on the team have worked on other high-profile cases,including Watergate and the Enron fraud scandal, as well asrepresenting U.S. companies in legal dealings, according to CNN.

Three of the five lawyers gave overwhelmingly to Democrats, totaling more than $53,000 since 1988, and more than half of those donations came from just one lawyer, James Quarles, who works at the same firm where Mueller worked, WilmerHale.

Quarles gave nearly $33,000 to political campaigns, including presidential candidates Michael Dukakis, Al Gore, John Kerry, Barack Obama, and Hillary Clinton.

Quarles also gave more than $10,000 to help Democrats running for the House and another $10,000 to candidates running for Senate seats, including money to Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, CNN reported.

Ironically, Quarles is also the only lawyer among Muellers team who donated to Republicans, giving $2,500 to Rep. Jason Chaffetz (R-UT) in 2015 and $250 to then-Sen. George Allen (R-VA) back in 2005.

Only about 30 percent of the donations were for 2016 elections, according to CNN, including Quarless and Jeannie Rhees, who both gave the maximum $2,700 contribution to Clintons campaign last year.

Rhee has donated more than $16,000 since 2008, all to Democrats, including the maximum allowed contribution to the Clinton campaign in 2016 and 2015, totaling $5,400. She also gave $7,300 to both of Obamas presidential campaigns.

Perhaps more importantly, Rhee hasalready been in the spotlight for representing the Clinton Foundation in a racketeering lawsuit brought by a conservative advocacy group, and also representing Clinton herself in a lawsuit seeking access to her private emails.

Mueller, who was FBI director under by President George W. Bush, also hired Andrew Weissmann, who led the Enron investigation, gave $2,300 to Obamas first presidential campaign in 2008, and $2,000 to the Democratic National Committee in 2006.

FEC records do not show any donations by Weissman in the 2016 election cycle, according to CNN. There also are no FEC records for Aaron Zebley, who left WilmerHale to work on the Russia investigation.

Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, who endorsed Trump, said on Monday that Muellers team cant be impartial given their political activism.

Republicans are delusional if they think the special counsel is going to be fair, Gingrich tweeted. Look who he is hiring. Check FEC reports. Time to rethink.

There arent any records of political donations from Mueller himself, CNN reported. A spokesman for Mueller declined to comment Monday afternoon about the political donations from his legal team and the criticism some of the team were partisan.

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Report: 3 Members of Special Counsel Mueller's Team Donated to Dems, Including Hillary, Obama - Breitbart News

How attitudes about gender may have helped Hillary Clinton in 2016 … – Washington Post

By Harold Clarke and Marianne Stewart By Harold Clarke and Marianne Stewart June 12

On May 2, during the Women for Women Internationals annual luncheon,CNNs Christiane Amanpourasked Hillary Clinton whether misogyny contributed to her defeat in the 2016 presidential election. The Democratic nominee replied: Yes. I do think that it played a role. On May 31, Clinton reiterated the claim in a widely publicized interview at Recodes Code Conference 2017 event.

In making this claim, Clinton asserted what many political commentators, and no doubt millions of Americans also believe: Negative attitudes toward women affected voters in 2016, and the impact of these attitudes influenced the outcome of the election.

We bring fresh data, and a surprising finding, to this topic.

In the fall of 2016, we asked six questions about the role and status of women on a national survey called the Cooperative Congressional Election Study (CCES). Respondents could agree or disagree with these six statements:

These questions are intended to capture whether survey respondents have progressive or traditionalist attitudes toward womens roles and statuses, without any reference to Clinton, Donald Trump, political parties or the election.

As the graph below shows, for the most part, progressive attitudes are more prevalent than traditionalist ones, but sizable minorities of those answering the survey expressed traditionalist attitudes, especially among men.

But even after accounting for other factors, attitudes toward womens roles were still correlated with how people voted. For example, if we imagine that the index runs from zero(most progressive) to 100 (most traditional) the average voter scores roughly a 40. Holding other factors equal, a shift from a relatively progressive position (20) to a relatively traditional position (60) would reduce the chance of voting for Clinton from 57percent to 17 percent. The finding is robust the impact of attitudes toward womens roles was consistent in statistical models with many different combinations of factors that might influence how people voted.

One interesting question is whether attitudes about womens roles were more strongly related to the votes of men or women. We didnt find evidence of any difference. These attitudes mattered similarly for both men and women.

Another important question is whether attitudes about womens roles mattered more in 2016 than in 2012? If so, this suggests that there really was something distinctive about 2016, when a female candidate ran against a male candidate who had made many crude comments about women.

The 2016 CCES asked respondents whether they supported Obama or Romney in 2012. If we apply the same statistical model to peoples 2012 vote choice, we find that attitudes toward women did not have a meaningful association with whether people supported Obama and Romney, despite the Obama campaigns attacks on Romney and Republicans for waging a war on women. Attitudes toward womens roles and statuses did not have the same traction in 2012 that they did in 2016.

In short, our analysis suggests that Hillary Clinton is correct: Attitudes toward womens roles and statuses influenced presidential voting in 2016. If fewer voters had held traditionalist attitudes toward womens roles and statuses, Clintons national popular vote total (already a plurality) would have increased. Even small shifts in these attitudes could have affected the outcomes in states like Michigan, Pennsylvania and Ohio, where Clinton lost by an average of only 0.57percent.

That said, there is another important implication of our findings one more surprising and actually more favorable to the Clinton campaign. Our survey clearly shows that attitudes toward womens roles and statuses were tilted in a progressive direction, so the salience of womens roles in voter decision-making likely helped Clinton more than it hurt her. She had more votes to gain from people with progressive attitudes than she had votes to lose from those with traditionalist views.

Thus, playing what some observers might call the woman card may have been good politics for Clinton in 2016 even if it was not enough to bring her to the White House.

Harold Clarke and Marianne Stewart are professors in the school of economic, political and policy sciences at the University of Texas at Dallas.

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How attitudes about gender may have helped Hillary Clinton in 2016 ... - Washington Post