As Republicans become more anti-immigrant, President
Obama repeated his pledge to fight to bring undocumented immigrants out
of the shadows during his weekly address.
In his weekly address, President Obama said:
Of course, we can’t just celebrate this
heritage, we have to defend it – by fixing our broken immigration
system. Nearly two years ago, Democrats and Republicans in the Senate
came together to do that. They passed a commonsense bill to secure our
border, get rid of backlogs, and give undocumented immigrants who are
already living here a pathway to citizenship if they paid a fine, paid
their taxes, and went to the back of the line. But for nearly two
years, Republican leaders in the House have refused to even allow a vote
on it.
That’s why, in the meantime, I’m going to keep doing
everything I can to make our immigration system more just and more
fair. Last fall, I took action to provide more resources for border
security; focus enforcement on the real threats to our security;
modernize the legal immigration system for workers, employers, and
students; and bring more undocumented immigrants out of the shadows so
they can get right with the law. Some folks are still fighting against
these actions. I’m going to keep fighting for them. Because the law is
on our side. It’s the right thing to do. And it will make America
stronger.
I want us to remember people like Ann Dermody from
Alexandria, Virginia. She’s originally from Ireland and has lived in
America legally for years. She worked hard, played by the rules and
dreamed of becoming a citizen. In March, her dream came true. And
before taking the oath, she wrote me a letter. “The papers we
receive…will not change our different accents [or] skin tones,” Ann
said. “But for that day, at least, we’ll feel like we have arrived.”
Well, to Ann and immigrants like her who
have come to our shores seeking a better life – yes, you have arrived.
And by sharing our stories, and staying true to our heritage as a nation
of immigrants, we can keep that dream alive for generations to come.
Obama’s remarks are likely to send Republicans into ear-splitting fitful screams of amnesty. Last month,
Ted Cruz summed up the Republican position, “Well, but if you grant
in-state tuition to students who are here illegally, that comes at the
expense of American citizens or it comes at the expense of legal
immigrants who follow the rules to come here, you know, there’s a finite
number of slots, and a finite number of dollars. And often the people
that get left behind in this immigration debate are legal immigrants,
are people like my dad who in 1957 fled Cuba, he came on a student visa,
came here legally, and I think most American people outside of
Washington agree that we need to secure the borders, we need to stop
illegal immigration. Amnesty is wrong.”
Scott Walker has completely flipped-flopped on immigration,
and now suggests that legal immigration should be reduced, “The next
president and the next Congress need to make decisions about a legal
immigration system that’s based on, first and foremost, on protecting
American workers and American wages. It is a fundamentally lost issue by
many in elected positions today, is what is this doing for American
workers looking for jobs, what is this doing to wages, and we need to
have that to be at the forefront of our discussion going forward.”
Being that many Republicans are taking hard-line
stances against legal immigration, President Obama’s statements about
getting undocumented immigrants right with the law should make their
heads explode.
The
Republican Party has become firmly anti-immigrant, which is why
immigrant support for Democrats continues to grow even as President
Obama’s time in office is winding down.
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