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Immigration Reform News September 19, 2022 / Qué Pasa En Inmigración

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America’s Voice

 

The DeSantis Stunt: Cruelty is the Point, Distraction is the Goal, and the Majority is Appalled

Republicanos latinos, cómplices por su silencio del teatro político de DeSantis

English

Washington Times Migrant busing campaign exposes extreme rift over America’s borders
By Stephan Dinan
September 18, 2022

YubaNet.com Profiles in Cowardice: As DeSantis Treats Venezuelan Refugees As Political Pawns, Florida GOP Leaders Fail A Major Leadership Test
September 16, 2022

NPR Flying migrants to Massachusetts was political, critics say. But was it legal?
By Valerie Crowder
September 18, 2022

USA Today Could Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ migrant tactic backfire politically with key voting bloc?
By Ella Lee
September 16, 2022

Boston Globe Civil rights lawyers ask Healey, Rollins to open criminal investigation into migrants’ plight
By Laura Crimaldi
September 17, 2022

Miami Herald ‘A new low’: What some Miami Venezuelans think of migrants taken to Martha’s Vineyard Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/immigration/article265860501.html#storylink=cpy
By Grethel Aguila
September 16, 2022

Rolling Stone Trump Fumes: DeSantis Stole My Plan for Shipping Migrants
By Asawin Suesaeng and Adam Rawnsley
September 18, 2022

New York Times Majority of Latino Voters Out of G.O.P.’s Reach, New Poll Shows
By Jennifer Medina, Jazmine Ulloa and Ruth Igielnik
September 18, 2022

POLITICO Why we may not know who won the Senate on Election Day
By Zach Montellaro
September 19, 2022

NBC News Poll: Abortion, Trump boost midterm prospects for Democrats
By Mark Murray
September 18, 2022

San Antonio Report O’Rourke blasts DeSantis, Abbott for ‘stunts’ involving migrants
By Lindsey Carnett
September 19, 2022

Local10 Immigrant advocates in Miramar call system ‘broken,’ ask for change to TPS designations
By By Hatzel Vela and Ryan Mackey
September 14, 2022

The Guardian ‘They have no fear and no mercy’: gang rule engulfs Haitian capital
By Luke Taylor
September 18, 2022

Local10 Immigrant advocates in Miramar call system ‘broken,’ ask for change to TPS designations
By Hatzel Vela and Ryan Mackey
September 14, 2022

New York Times The Martha’s Vineyard Migrant Stunt Is Making One Truth About This Country Clear
By Farah Stockman
September 16, 2022

Washington Post Opinion Republicans are wearing cruelty as a badge of honor
By Jennifer Rubin
September 18, 2022

Washington Post Opinion DeSantis stage-managed his cruelty for everyone to see
September 16, 2022

The Nation Let’s Call DeSantis’s Migrant Stunt What It Is—Kidnapping
By Elie Mystal
September 16, 2022

Boston Globe Perla, the woman migrants say enticed them onto planes, reflects an ugliness we must contend with
By Yvonne Abraham
September 17, 2022

Miami Herald With shameful Martha’s Vineyard stunt, DeSantis dishes out cruelty with a smirk | Editorial Read more at: https://www.miamiherald.com/opinion/editorials/article265866426.html#storylink=cpy
September 16, 2022

YubaNet.com There may be no other issue on which the red-blue divide runs as deep as immigration right now, and you have to look no further than the spat between Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot. Mr. Abbott is running for reelection in November on a get-tough immigration platform, battling the Biden border surge with state police, his own border wall and a busing campaign that is sending migrants to Democratic-led cities of Washington, New York and Chicago. Ms. Lightfoot, who faces voters in February, has responded by blasting the Republican governor as un-Christian and “racist” but said she would happily take the new arrivals he was sending her. She has even used the fight to raise money for her campaign. “This is a critical moment for our city,” she said in an email to supporters asking for campaign donations. “I don’t appreciate Gov. Abbott’s discriminatory practices, but I’m not going to turn migrants away when we have the resources to welcome them with open arms.” Oddly enough, both the governor and the mayor probably have winning positions. In red Texas, border security is a top-of-mind issue for voters and has been for years, said Brendan Steinhauser, a Texas-based Republican strategist. The Republican governor’s stance plays well not just with Republicans, but also with independents and even border-area Hispanic voters who might otherwise tack toward the Democrats. “You’re with 60% of voters,” Mr. Steinhauser said. “If you spend time anywhere in Texas, you will find that the views on this are a little more in line with the security side.” Dick W. Simpson, a political science professor at the University of Illinois Chicago, said as a former Texan he wasn’t quite sure the state tilts that far on immigration anymore. But he said Ms. Lightfoot is feeling the pulse of voters in her city, which has a long history as a magnet for migrants, and her embrace of Mr. Abbott’s bused migrants is likely to help her among the city’s Hispanic voters. “Generally, I think the mayor’s position has been popular,” Mr. Simpson said. Where immigration falls for the rest of the country, however, remains murky. GOP strategists say the howls of protest from Democrats whose towns are targeted by the busing campaign can only help, underscoring just how bad things have become under President Biden. Democrats counter that the busing campaign is cruel and voters will punish the GOP for using migrants as a stunt. “What they’re doing is simply wrong, it’s un-American, it’s reckless,” Mr. Biden told a gathering of Hispanic Democrats on Thursday. He said the immigration debate should be over how much leniency to show, and he urged Congress to take up a bill offering citizenship rights to millions of immigrants who are in the country illegally. “It’s time to get it done. That’s why we have to win this off-year election,” the president said. Republicans entered 2022 figuring immigration would be a critical weapon they could use in their bid to retake Congress from Democrats in the midterm elections. Strategists had urged them to run hard on the issue, highlighting the chaos that Mr. Biden has spawned with his more lenient approach to illegal border crossers. But as the congressional campaigns hit the final stretch before November’s elections, it’s not clear how much power the issue retains. GOP leaders, while still carping about the border chaos, no longer place it among the top issues for voters, instead pointing to inflation, government spending and tax policy. That the border motivates Republican voters is not in doubt. Whether it matters beyond the GOP is very much an open question. America’s Voice, a leading immigrant-rights group, said polling shows other issues, such as abortion, have overtaken immigration in voters’ ballot calculus. Beyond that, the group contends, the GOP has overplayed its hand. “While immigration has declined in salience for most general election voters, it remains a powerful point of distinction between the parties. And while the most animated voters on immigration are the MAGA base voters, the vast majority of the general electorate rejects that extremism,” the group concluded. America’s Voice pointed to one late-August poll by progressive-leaning firms Hart Research and BSP Research that found Republicans do have the advantage on border issues, and on immigration overall. Voters in states and congressional districts deemed to be “battlegrounds” for control of Congress give the GOP a 48-40 advantage on immigration, the pollsters said. But the pollsters said those numbers flip when voters are given a specific choice between a Democrat who backs leniency toward immigrants already in the U.S. illegally, versus a Republican who opposes citizenship for the immigrants. Mr. Steinhauser said voters seem to be of two minds on immigration: They want borders controlled, but they are willing to be generous to those who broke the law to get in. “Every bit of data that I’ve seen tells me that there is actually some middle ground on immigration and border security,” he said. “I think there’s a lot of people nationwide who would like to see humane border security that prevents massive migration, that lets us understand who is coming and why, that doesn’t allow the cartels to run roughshod over our country, and treats people humanely and decently.” Democratic candidates in reelection battles have tacked to the right on border issues. In Arizona, which like Texas is a border state, Democratic Sen. Mark Kelly has touted his work on getting the Biden administration to complete sections of the Trump border wall near Yuma. Mr. Biden has had to go back on his promise of “not another foot” of construction. And though New Hampshire is far from the southern border, Democratic Sen. Maggie Hassan visited Arizona in the spring to record a video of her standing in front of the wall to urge more construction. That move drew fierce condemnation from Hispanic Democratic activists in her state. Elsewhere, though, Republicans are the ones embracing what have usually been considered Democratic positions on interior enforcement. In Wake County, North Carolina, the GOP nominee for sheriff has announced he will not restore cooperation agreements between the county and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Donnie Harrison also said he won’t honor any deportation “detainer” requests from ICE, creating an effective sanctuary jurisdiction. Mr. Harrison’s position is all the more surprising because it’s a reversal from four years ago, when he was sheriff and had a cooperative agreement with ICE. He lost his reelection bid in 2018 to a Democrat who vowed to end the cooperation agreement. Mr. Harrison’s reversal comes even as Wake County is reeling from the death of a sheriff’s deputy last month. Multiple migrants have been charged in the slaying.
September 16, 2022

Spanish

La Opinión (CA) Senador demócrata pide el TPS para los inmigrantes trasladados desde Texas, Arizona y Florida
By María Ortiz
September 16, 2022

La Opinión (CA) Estados Unidos da la bienvenida a más de 19,000 nuevos ciudadanos a partir del sábado
By María Ortiz
September 16, 2022

La Opinión (CA) Piden al Supremo de Florida investigar si DeSantis se extralimitó al enviar 50 inmigrantes de Texas a Martha’s Vineyard
By Agencia EFE
September 17, 2022

La Opinión (CA) ¿DeSantis violó el programa de reubicación de inmigrantes al enviarlos de Texas a Martha’s Vineyard y no desde Florida?
By Maribel Velázquez
September 17, 2022

La Opinión (CA) Retan a Newsom y DeSantis a debatir sobre el envío de inmigrantes
By Maribel Velázquez
September 17, 2022

La Opinión (CA) Greg Abbott envía otros 50 inmigrantes de Texas a la residencia de Kamala Harris
By Agencia EFE
September 17, 2022

La Opinión (CA) Los inmigrantes que llegaron a Martha´s Vineyard conmovieron a los vecinos
By Agencia EFE
September 18, 2022

La Opinión (CA) Gobierno de Ron DeSantis podría ser investigado por tráfico de personas al engañar a inmigrantes enviados a Martha’s Vineyard
By Jesús García
September 18, 2022