Chicago Sun-Times

Rahm falls behind Rauner in protecting immigrants

- BY VÂN HUYNH AND TANIA UNZUETA Vân Huynh is an immigrant from Vietnam and an immigratio­n attorney at PASO- West Suburban Action Project and previously at Asian Americans Advancing Justice- Chicago. Tania Unzueta is an undocument­ed organizer, DACA recipien

Three weeks ago, Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner signed the TRUST Act into law, making Illinois one of the first states to pass protection­s for immigrants since the 2016 election and putting into question Chicago’s claim as “the most immigrant- friendly city.” The TRUST Act sets a new standard for defending immigrant communitie­s against Trump- era attacks that the city of Chicago has yet to meet.

Community advocates gained a major victory with the Illinois TRUST Act, which prohibits police officers statewide from arresting or detaining an individual solely based on an immigratio­n detainer or warrant. The TRUST Act reinforces the constituti­onal requiremen­t that police officers must have a judicial warrant based on probable cause in order to arrest or hold anyone in police custody. In effect, police officers in Illinois are mandated to treat immigrants the same as they would ordinary citizens.

As two immigrant women who have been working to amend Chicago’s Welcoming City ordinance, we call on Mayor Rahm Emanuel and the City Council to provide real protection­s for all Chicagoans, which means not only responding to the Trump administra­tion but creating systems to protect immigrants for years to come.

The Welcoming City ordinance intended to keep immigrants safe is filled with loopholes excluding large categories of Chicagoans from protection. Under the ordinance, if an individual falls within one of the four loopholes, Chicago Police can use an immigratio­n warrant or detainer to arrest individual­s and facilitate their transfer to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t ( ICE).

For the last two years, Mayor Emanuel and the City’s Office of New Americans have fought against community members to block any proposed changes to the Welcoming City ordinance that would extend protection­s to all Chicagoans. Even as the TRUST Act moved through the General Assembly, the mayor’s office stated that this was not a time to move forward a policy without some collaborat­ion with ICE, and that it would wait to see what the governor would do. Now that the governor has acted, Mayor Emanuel wants the state to do more while the city stalls any changes on how it collaborat­es with immigratio­n enforcemen­t.

In addition, when the city filed a lawsuit against the Department of Justice last month in defense of the Welcoming City ordinance, it used the lawsuit as reason to avoid meeting with black and immigrant- led groups calling for an ordinance without warrantles­s loopholes. Despite support from more than 50 immigrant rights and community- based organizati­ons, including the ACLU of Illinois, the mayor’s opposition has kept the proposed amendments in committee since February.

Like the mayor’s “One Chicago” campaign, the lawsuit pays lip service to an inclusive and welcoming city for immigrants, while leaving those most vulnerable to deportatio­ns unprotecte­d under President Trump’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t priorities. In fact, the mayor’s office’s insistence on keeping the loopholes in the Welcoming City ordinance reinforces President Trump’s troubling rhetoric portray- ing all immigrants as dangerous and dehumanizi­ng anyone who has been criminaliz­ed by local police.

That the Republican governor has moved forward a policy that respects constituti­onal values for all immigrants and the Democratic mayor makes large symbolic gestures with little substance is not without its ironies. Instead of capitalizi­ng on immigratio­n for political gains, Mayor Emanuel and the City Council should remove the four loopholes in the Welcoming City ordinance in order to provide immigrant communitie­s real, substantia­l protection­s from deportatio­ns.

 ?? JACOB WITTICH/ SUN- TIMES ?? ABOVE: Aldermen and immigrant rights organizati­ons, at a City Hall rally last year, want an amendment to Chicago’s Welcoming City ordinance to further protect the city’s immigrant community.
JACOB WITTICH/ SUN- TIMES ABOVE: Aldermen and immigrant rights organizati­ons, at a City Hall rally last year, want an amendment to Chicago’s Welcoming City ordinance to further protect the city’s immigrant community.
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES ?? LEFT: Gov. Bruce Rauner smiles after signing the TRUST Act on Aug. 28.
ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES LEFT: Gov. Bruce Rauner smiles after signing the TRUST Act on Aug. 28.

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