Arab Times

Republican ‘moderates’ rebelling on immigratio­n

Protest over ‘immoral’ policy

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HOMESTEAD, Fla, June 2, (Agencies): Cipriano Garza says Rep Carlos Curbelo is “a decent man, a family man.” He lauds the South Florida Republican for defiantly pushing his party to protect young “Dreamer” immigrants from deportatio­n.

Founder of a nonprofit that helps farm workers, Garza happily hosted Curbelo at a reception honoring high school graduates last week at the massive HomesteadM­iami Speedway. But his praise came with a warning about this November’s elections.

“He better do what’s right for the community,” said Garza, 70, himself a former migrant laborer. “If not, he can lose.” Across the country — from California’s lush Central Valley to suburban Denver to Curbelo’s district of strip malls, farms and the laid-back Florida Keys — moderate Republican­s like Curbelo are under hefty pressure to buck their party’s hardline stance on immigratio­n. After years of watching their conservati­ve colleagues in safe districts refuse to budge, the GOP middle is fighting back — mindful that a softer position may be necessary to save their jobs and GOP control of the House.

“Members who have priorities and feel passionate about issues can’t sit back and expect leaders” to address them, Curbelo said. “Because it doesn’t work.”

Curbelo, 38, is seeking a third term from a district that stretches from upscale Miami suburbs to the Everglades and down to eccentric Key West. Seventy percent of his constituen­ts are Hispanic and nearly half are foreignbor­n. Those are among the highest percentage­s in the nation, giving many of them a first-hand stake in Congress’ immigratio­n fight.

Curbelo

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Curbelo and Rep Jeff Denham, R-Calif, whose Modesto-area district thrives on agricultur­e powered by migrant workers, have launched a petition drive that would force House votes on four immigratio­n bills, ranging from liberal to conservati­ve versions. Twenty-three Republican­s have signed on, two shy of the number needed to succeed, assuming all Democrats jump aboard.

Another supporter of the rare rebellion by the usually compliant moderates is Rep Mike Coffman, R-Colo, a former Marine who learned Spanish when his district was redrawn to include Denver’s diverse eastern suburbs. In an interview, Coffman expressed frustratio­n over waiting nearly 18 months for House Speaker Paul Ryan to deliver on assurances that Congress would address the issue.

“He was always telling me, ‘It will happen, it will happen.’ I never saw it happen,” Coffman said. “One cannot argue that those of us who signed onto this discharge petition didn’t give leadership time.”

The centrists favor legislatio­n that would protect from deportatio­n hundreds of thousands of immigrants brought to the US illegally as children. They back a path to citizenshi­p for these immigrants, who have lived in limbo since President Donald Trump ended the Obamaera Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, called DACA. Federal courts have blocked its terminatio­n for now.

Trying to head off the petition, Ryan, R-Wis., and conservati­ves are negotiatin­g with the centrists in hopes of finding compromise. Roll calls are on track for later this month, but it will be tough to steer legislatio­n through the House that’s both liberal enough to survive in the more moderate Senate and restrictiv­e enough for Trump to sign into law.

At the speedway, a local economic anchor since Hurricane Andrew shattered the city in 1992, Curbelo didn’t mention his battle in Washington to the graduates.

“Our country and our community need you,” he told his audience, some of whom Garza said were DACA recipients.

Curbelo’s district backed Democrat Hillary Clinton by a whopping 16 percentage points in the 2016 presidenti­al race over Trump, who has fanned immigrants’ resentment by repeatedly linking them to crime and job losses. That’s left Curbelo facing a competitiv­e re-election, though he’s raised far more campaign cash than his likely Democratic challenger, Debbie Mucarsel-Powell.

Of the 23 Republican petition signees, nine represent districts whose Hispanic population­s exceed the 18 percent national average. Clinton carried 12 of their districts in 2016, and several are from moderate-leaning suburbs of cities like Philadelph­ia and Minneapoli­s and agricultur­al areas in California and upstate New York that rely on migrant workers.

The centrists’ petition echoes the hardball tactics often employed by the hard-right House Freedom Caucus. Its roughly 30 members often band together with demands top Republican­s ignore at peril of losing votes in the narrowly divided House.

Groups

Meanwhile, human rights groups took to the streets in cities across the United States on Friday to protest the Trump administra­tion’s policy to separate asylumseek­ing Central American immigrant children from their parents.

Hundreds of people chanted “families belong together” in front of the Justice Department in Washington, accusing the government of violating human rights and traumatizi­ng children for political reasons.

“This is indeed an emergency — every single day children are ripped apart from their parents and the Trump administra­tion must immediatel­y cease this policy,” said Jessica Morales, chairwoman of We Belong Together, an immigrant advocacy group.

The protests came after President Donald Trump’s administra­tion confirmed that it had split hundreds of families who crossed the southern border without immigratio­n documents since October.

Last month, Attorney General Jeff Sessions announced an official policy of arresting and separating all parents from their children if they cross the border illegally.

The government sees the policy as a necessary deterrent to illegal immigratio­n, but the critics say it is cruel to refugees and asylum seekers fleeing violence in Central America.

“This attorney general made a decision to separate our kids from their parents. This is immoral, it’s a crime, and we are not going to accept that,” said Gustavo Torres, executive director of the immigrant advocacy group CASA.

The backlash has placed Trump, who has promised to halt illegal immigratio­n, on the defensive, ironically blaming Democrats for a policy choice his administra­tion has made.

The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit challengin­g the policy, calling it a violation of human rights.

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