Archive for the ‘Immigration Reform’ Category

Obama faces new difficulties on immigration reform – Video


Obama faces new difficulties on immigration reform
United States President Barack Obama is faced with new stumbling blocks in his push for immigration reform as 17 states have joined to file suit against Obam...

By: teleSUR English

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Obama faces new difficulties on immigration reform - Video

Republican Presidents Advocate for Comprehensive Immigration Reform – Video


Republican Presidents Advocate for Comprehensive Immigration Reform

By: Nancy Pelosi

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Republican Presidents Advocate for Comprehensive Immigration Reform - Video

17 States Sue Obama Administration Claiming Immigration Action Is Illegal! – Video


17 States Sue Obama Administration Claiming Immigration Action Is Illegal!
http://www.undergroundworldnews.com Texas is leading a coalition of 17 states in suing President Obama over his plan for immigration reform. The lawsuit argues that his executive action violated...

By: Dahboo777

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17 States Sue Obama Administration Claiming Immigration Action Is Illegal! - Video

Immigration Reform Discussions Continue in the Valley

HARRISONBURG, Va. (WHSV)-- It has been exactly one month since President Obama laid out his controversial executive action on immigration. The plan protects more than four million undocumented immigrants around the nation.

Some think it's been a long time waiting for reform, with the last true immigration reform action in the 90s.

Out of the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S., less than half meet the requirements which will grant them protection from deportation. It's important to note that this is a three year relief from deportation....and some say it's only a temporary solution.

"There was much rejoicing," said Father Robayo. "I mean everyone was very happy to hear this...very happy that the President took this measure."

Father Daniel Robayo has a deep bond with the Harrisonburg immigrant population, being an immigrant himself, and helping those who he says live day after day in the dark, for fear of the law.

"Well the fears which were based on reality, is that anyone could be pulled over for a stop," said Father Robayo. "We have lived essentially under ethnic profiling."

Juan asked us to hide his identity because he is an undocumented immigrant living in the Valley. The executive action take by President Obama will not change Juan's situation. He's not a parent to an American child, nor did he arrive here before the age of 16. He's hoping for stronger reforms in the future.

"Our situation doesn't let us have peace because we are constantly in fear of suddenly being caught by an immigration agent," said Juan.

But not everyone thinks this executive action is the right way to go.

"It's not going to deal with the need for electronic verification of employment system...or, and entry-exit visa system, so we know who has come into the country and who's not," said Congressman Bob Goodlatte.

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Immigration Reform Discussions Continue in the Valley

Two lives changed by the 1986 immigration amnesty, with very different results

Walter Torrez and Tomas Villalta share some history. In the early 1980s, they both paid coyotes to hurry them across the desert and into the United States illegally. In the late 1980s, both became legal residents and eventually U.S. citizens after President Ronald Reagan signed the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, the program often cited as the last mass effort to legalize undocumented aliens.

But the two men went on to vastly different lives in the Washington region, illustrating the mixed results of the 1986 program for 2.7 million participants and the arguments it offers for both sides in the current immigration debate.

President Obamas recent executive action temporarily shielding an estimated 4 million immigrants from deportation is not as dramatic as the permanent legal residency offered by the Reagan-era initiative. And comparisons are further complicated by the lack of research on the beneficiaries of the 1986 amnesty.

Even so, the fates of Torrez and Villalta provide a glimpse at how differently the new protections could play out for those just now able to, in the presidents words, come out of the shadows.

After getting his green card, Torrez, 46, went on to college, started a series of small businesses and now owns La Nueva 87.7 FM, a Spanish-language radio station broadcasting from Silver Spring. The Bolivian native lives a comfortable suburban life in Prince Georges County and is driving his seventh Mercedes-Benz. He credits becoming a legal citizen with setting him on the path to American success.

Without it, maybe I would still be painting houses, said Torrez, taking a break from the morning radio show in which he regularly exhorts his largely immigrant audience to seize the opportunities available in their adopted country. Hes been a vocal advocate for legalizing todays undocumented residents and offers on-air advice to those navigating the immigration system.

By contrast, Villalta remains on the lowest rungs of the regions economic ladder 26 years after getting his first residency card. Even unskilled work dried up after the Georgetown restaurant where hed washed dishes for 16 years closed in August. Villalta, 65, who became a U.S. citizen a year ago, recently found himself in a Home Depot parking lot, hustling for work with undocumented day laborers.

The Salvadoran-born Villalta is proud of his new blue passport. He was thrilled last month to cast his first vote in the D.C. mayoral election (por Muriel!). He knows he is better off in Northwest Washington than in the poor mountain village in El Salvador where he was born. But he has begun to question the value of a legal right to work in a country where no one wants to give him a job.

Now I see all the young guys getting work who dont have papers just because they are young, he said in Spanish. He has never learned more than a few workplace phrases of English.

Into the sunshine

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Two lives changed by the 1986 immigration amnesty, with very different results