Lack of Immigration Reform Uniting USA Hispanics PHOENIX (By Gabriel Arana, American Prospect) June 29, 2010 — Despite the outcry over Arizona's immigration-enforcement bill and mounting pressure from Hispanic groups, the lead immigration-reform advocate in the House, Rep. Luis Gutierrez, admitted yesterday that any immigration bill that includes a citizenship provision for the undocumented doesn't have the votes to pass. "We are 102 strong, we are 102 commitment, but we are insufficient," he said at a press conference yesterday.
That's of course a far cry from the
requisite majority in the 435-member House. Gutierrez said "there's still time" to pass a reform bill after the Elena Kagan confirmation hearings, but this seems like a quixotic goal.
And with Republicans likely to take
over one of the houses of Congress in the midterm elections, prospects
for next year look dim as well. Of course the need isn't any less
pressing. In the past, immigrants from Latin Americans — who account for the majority of the current migration wave — have been politically heterodox and fractured. That is, neither have they been reliably Democratic nor have the interests of different Latin-American immigrant communities always aligned.
Cuban immigrants, for instance, have
tended to support Republicans more than Hispanics from other
Latin-American countries and Hispanics across the board helped push
George W. Bush to victory by giving him 44 percent of their votes in
2004. The significance of this is not just that Hispanics are reorienting themselves politically. The Arizona law and similar anti-immigrant measure have led many Hispanics, who have historically had lower levels of political participation than other minority groups, to voice their opinions — on the streets, to their representatives, and in the pages of Hispanic papers — on an issue that affects them directly. |
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