Chicago Sun-Times

Fact-check: Rival’s attack on Lipinski’s immigratio­n stance crosses a line

- BY KIANNAH SEPEDA-MILLER

Critics of U.S. Rep. Dan Lipinski, one of the last conservati­ve Democrats in the House, often argue he is out of step with what they view as his constituen­ts’ more progressiv­e values.

The eight-term congressma­n’s record on hot-button issues including health care, abortion and immigratio­n has become a central focus in the March 17 primary challenge for the 3rd Congressio­nal District seat he holds.

One attack on Lipinski’s immigratio­n record caught our attention because it suggests the congressma­n is aligned with some of Republican President Donald Trump’s most controvers­ial policies.

A graphic tweeted by challenger Rush Darwish, who runs a multimedia production company in Chicago, said Lipinski “voted against the DREAM Act, supports separating families and banning Muslims.”

The 3rd Congressio­nal District is the state’s most Arab American district, according to experts. And Darwish, who is Palestinia­n American, has said Lipinski has ignored the interests of immigrant communitie­s there.

Lipinski’s 2010 vote against legislatio­n that would have protected “Dreamers” — the nickname for immigrants brought to the country illegally as children — from deportatio­n has been widely reported. But we didn’t know what Darwish was referencin­g when he claimed Lipinski backed “separating families and banning Muslims.” So we decided to find out.

Lipinski voted against DREAM Act, now supports Dreamers

There’s a lot to unpack in Darwish’s claim, so we’ll start with its clearest contention.

First introduced in 2001, the DREAM Act not only would have prevented the deportatio­n of Dreamers but also would have provided a path to citizenshi­p.

In 2010, Lipinski was one of 38 Democrats to vote against the bill, which passed the House but died in the Senate.

Since then, however, Lipinski has taken steps to protect the beneficiar­ies of a similar program instituted by former President Barack Obama and has more recently backed new legislatio­n that resembles the bill he voted against.

Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, offered Dreamers temporary protection from deportatio­n but did not include a path to citizenshi­p. In 2017, Trump moved to end DACA. His administra­tion is still required to process renewal applicatio­ns for immigrants who have been granted DACA and want to renew that protection, but the government is not allowing new applicants to apply.

Lipinski signed on to a letter that year requesting Trump continue DACA and told the Sun-Times he would support legislatio­n to protect the program.

And in 2019, he co-sponsored and helped pass a House bill to protect DACA recipients. The legislatio­n, which is unlikely to secure Senate approval, would provide a path to citizenshi­p for Dreamers and other immigrants with temporary legal status.

‘Separating families’

In April 2018, Trump’s Justice Department introduced a “zero tolerance” policy that called for prosecutin­g all adults referred by immigratio­n authoritie­s for violating immigratio­n laws. As a consequenc­e of that policy, children were separated from their parents as they arrived at the border.

Lipinski criticized those separation­s at the time and signed on to several letters questionin­g the government’s actions. Last year, he also co-sponsored legislatio­n aimed at limiting family separation­s near the border.

But a Darwish spokespers­on told us his candidate’s tweet wasn’t talking about those separation­s.

“We are referring to Congressma­n Lipinski’s vote against the DREAM Act,” spokespers­on Andrew Patinkin wrote in an email. “Lipinski effectivel­y voted in favor of the separation of families because when undocument­ed people are brought to the United States as children and are not provided a path to legal residency, they may very well be deported.”

Even by that logic, Lipinski clearly reversed course on providing legal residency to Dreamers.

‘Banning Muslims’

Shortly after taking office, Trump signed an executive order temporaril­y suspending immigratio­n from seven Muslim-majority nations and the U.S. refugee program.

Lipinski decried the president’s order in a press release at the time, calling it “ill conceived and harmful to innocent individual­s.”

Instead of pointing to evidence Lipinski supports Trump’s travel ban, a version of which was upheld by the Supreme Court in 2018, Darwish’s spokesman cited the congressma­n’s absence from the list of cosponsors for a bill that would limit the president’s authority to restrict residents of other countries from entering the United States.

When we asked Lipinski’s campaign if he planned to support the bill, spokespers­on Sally Daly told us he intends to vote for it. Daly also said he became a co-sponsor “this week” but did not provide a specific date. The list now shows he was added on March 5, the same day we spoke with her.

Our ruling

Darwish’s tweet claims Lipinski “voted against the DREAM Act, supports separating families and banning

Muslims.”

Darwish’s claim contains some truth in citing Lipinski’s vote against the

DREAM Act, but it gives a misleading impression overall of the congressma­n’s current stance on key immigratio­n issues.

We rate his claim Mostly False.

The Better Government Associatio­n runs PolitiFact Illinois, the local arm of the nationally renowned, Pulitzer Prize-winning fact-checking enterprise that rates the truthfulne­ss of statements made by government­al leaders and politician­s. BGA’s fact-checking service has teamed up weekly with the Sun-Times, in print and online. You can find all of the PolitiFact Illinois stories we’ve reported together at https://chicago.suntimes. com/section/politifact/.

 ?? RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES ?? 3rd Congressio­nal District candidate Rush Darwish.
RICH HEIN/SUN-TIMES 3rd Congressio­nal District candidate Rush Darwish.
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 ??  ?? Rep. Dan Lipinski
Rep. Dan Lipinski
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