East Bay Times

Will Democrats miss a chance to be immigrants’ champions?

- By Jean Guerrero Jean Guerrero is a Los Angeles Times columnist. © 2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

When he was president, Donald Trump was above all an enemy of immigrants: a Mexicanbas­hing, Muslim-banning, border-wall-building mogul.

Now, Democrats have a chance to be immigrants’ champions. But nine months into the Biden administra­tion, they have yet to protect millions of undocument­ed people who helped the nation survive the pandemic.

President Joe Biden promised to “aggressive­ly advocate for legislatio­n that creates a clear road map to legal status and citizenshi­p” for 11 million, acknowledg­ing them as an “essential” part of his “Build Back Better” plan. But his sweeping bill, the U.S. Citizenshi­p Act of 2021, went nowhere.

Since then, Democrats have twice tried to add legalizati­on to a huge social spending bill using a streamline­d process known as budget reconcilia­tion. But Senate parliament­arian Elizabeth MacDonough, an unelected referee, rejected both attempts. Democrats can disregard her nonbinding advice. They can even replace a parliament­arian, as Republican­s have done.

Instead, Democrats are mulling over a third proposal for her review that would grant immigrants parole rather than green cards. The parole plan would prolong limbo and second-class status for immigrants who have built their lives in this country.

“It’s just complicity at this point,” Marcelo Hernandez Castillo, author of “Children of the Land,” a memoir about growing up in fear of deportatio­n, said of the Democrats’ lackluster performanc­e.

A new Global Strategic Council

survey shows that 90% of Democrats and 75% of independen­ts would be “upset” if Democrats fail to pass a path-to-citizenshi­p proposal.

Some Democrats in the House aren’t giving up. Reps. Jesús “Chuy” García of Illinois, Lou Correa of Santa Ana and Adriano Espaillat of New York have said they will vote down any budget reconcilia­tion deal on the multitrill­ion-dollar infrastruc­ture package that does not include “common-sense immigratio­n reform.”

They called on Vice President Kamala Harris to disregard the parliament­arian’s advice while presiding over the Senate. That move would be subject to appeal. Ultimately, the outcome would depend on how many Democrats have the courage to stand up for immigrants.

California Sen. Alex Padilla, a Democrat, has been the chief advocate for a pathway to citizenshi­p for essential workers, Dreamers and temporary protected status holders. He says they’ve earned green cards — classified as “essential” during the pandemic. Now, he says, “we have to treat them as essential.”

On whether he would reject a reconcilia­tion deal that lacks green cards, he told me: “There are a number of options, and in my opinion, all of those options are still on the table.”

Pushing hard for immigratio­n reform is both the right thing and the politicall­y strategic thing to do.

If Democrats don’t deliver for immigrants, they could face a crisis of Latino turnout in the midterm. The Latino vote has become crucial in swing counties and helped save California Gov. Gavin Newsom from a recent recall election. Latinos are not monolithic, but more than 80% support legalizati­on for the undocument­ed.

Nothing would energize Latino voters more than a pathway to citizenshi­p for the undocument­ed. The majority of Latino U.S. citizens live in households with noncitizen­s. Failing to deliver on this promise would depress turnout and allow Trump to pick up Latino voters by appealing to distrust and disillusio­nment.

“The Democratic Party has to do something with immigratio­n that will be a major change, where people will actually see the difference,” said José Palma, coordinato­r of the Massachuse­tts TPS Committee and an activist from El Salvador.

Palma recalls door-knocking in 2016 for Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire. Many Latinos told him they were skeptical. President Obama had won in 2008 with the slogan “Yes we can,” echoing “Sí se puede,” the mantra of Dolores Huerta, the Latina labor leader. Latinos had shown up to vote for him in historic numbers. But then Obama deported a record 3 million people.

By pandering to xenophobia, Obama reinforced the criminaliz­ation of immigratio­n in the American imaginatio­n, fueled the GOP’s nativist hysteria and left Latinos feeling betrayed.

If Democrats fail again to act boldly and instead cater to race-baiting, they’ve already lost. We can never nail the coffin on Trumpism without being willing to fight for immigrants. Cowardice will pave the way for a Trump comeback.

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