Compañeros y compañeras;

I think this statement is a good beginning coming from a group of congressmen. 
However, if we read carefully, there is nothing new in their statement that all 
immigration activists across the Nation have not said. What we need from them 
is a rectified approach as to how a piece of legislation is presented and 
ushered into law. It reads as if it had ben taken from Luis Gutierrez's STRIVE 
Act, where enforcement and border protection come first.  

Just as in the STRIVE Act.  these congressmen fail to address fundamental 
issues which are at the core of an effective,  just and humane immigration 
reform bill.  For example:

1)  There is no mention of including labor law reform as part of an immigration 
solution. 
reforms that would guarantee a living wage for workers, their right to organize 
in their work place, and the right to strike.
2)  No mention of revising NAFTA, which is what has caused the exodus of 
immigrants into the United States. No mention of how we must protect the health 
and welfare of workers on both sides of the border and how we must protect the 
environment.
3)   No mention of the need to bring anti-discrimination protection into line 
with those in other civil rights laws.              
        No mentioned of the need to ensure that immigration enforcement 
complements rather than undermine the enforcement of labor and employment laws. 
0ANo mentioned of the need to   increase the budget for the Wage and Hour 
Division of the Department of Labor and the Occupational   Safety and Health 
Administration. 

There are other points which an immigration reform bill must contained in order 
to reflect the reasons millions and millions of people marched in the last two 
years. we need much more than half-baked statements.  We really need the proper 
representation in Washington.

I am running for the 4th Congressional District in Illinois. I ask that, on 
November 4th, you lend me your vote to get to Washington, and I will be a 
strong and consistent voice for you and will fight to include the above 
fundamental points in any immigration reform legislation.

Omar N. Lopez
Candidate
U.S. House of Representatives
4th Congressional District
Green Party
www.omarlopez2008.org

LIVE GREEN - VOTE GREEN





-----Original Message-----
From: Jorge Mujica <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; ChicagoMayDay <[email protected]>
Sent: Tue, 7 Oct 2008 1:34 am
Subject: <ChicagoMayDay> Statement on Immigration




Statement on Immigration
Hispanic and Jewish Members of Congress
September 29, 2008
 
As Jews and Hispanics, we share an experience that defines our histories and 
reflects our families' rootshe experience of being a "stranger in a strange 
land."  Today we express our commitment to immigrants of all faiths and 
backgrounds.  After all, as the Old Testament teacheswe are our brothers' and 
sisters' keepers.

In addition to 
being Hispanics and Jews, we are also members of Congress.  As a result, we are 
responsible for legislation to safeguard the fair and humane treatment of all 
people, and we have the best interests of our communities and all Americans at 
heart.

It is in this spirit of our shared experiences and common goals that we put 
forth our shared priorities for fair and workable immigration reform.

Our policies must hold employers who do not comply with the law accountable and 
empower the federal government to swiftly investigate and root out bad-acting 
employers who flout our labor and immigration laws.  Securing a legal workforce 
also depends on an employment verification system that accurately and 
efficiently identifies eligible new hires.

We also fully support securing our borders.  Strong borders require an adequate 
supply of manpower, groundbreaking technology and sensible infrastructure that 
regulates the flow of people and goods while doing no harm to local communities 
or the environment.  

Enforcement alone, however, no matter how well formulated or funded, is doomed 
to fail.  We cannot deport our way out of this problem.

Poorly planned raids intended to grab headlines are a not only a waste of 
taxpayer money, but they also are an inefficient enforcement tool that displace 
U.S. workers, interrupt laborers from organizing, tear apart American families, 
and destroy neighborhoods and towns.  The blame cannot simply be placed on 
undocumented workers; abusive employers who violate our immigration laws must 
be held accountable.

As Jews and Hispanics, we are called to welcome the stranger in our midst.  In 
policy terms, this means that we must look upon the estimated 12 million 
undocumented individuals living among us not with scorn, but with compassion, 
as we require them to come forward, apply for legal status, pass rigorous 
background checks, pay back taxes, learn English and fully integrate into the 
mainstream economy and American society.  Dealing fully and humanely with the 
undocumented living in the United States is key to realistic and effective 
immigration reform that protects the homeland and is consistent with our 
traditions and values.

In order to strengthen our country in the future, we must also institute 
reforms that, unlike those of the past, prevent illegal immigration.

We need an immigration system that reflects our family values: parents and 
children and husbands and wives should be together rather than separated by 
antiquated laws and bureaucratic processing.  The fair and swift reunification 
of families in the United States would eliminate the incentive to break visa 
rules or risk one's life crossing a remote border to be with a loved one.

Current legal channels for immigration to the U.S. are also insufficient to 
provide many employers with the workers they need.  Established worker programs 
should better fill workforce gaps and protect the jobs, wages and working 
conditions of Americans.  For too long the absence of legal channels for 
low-skilled workers has served as a ready tool
 for abusive employers to deny Americans jobs and exploit vulnerable immigrants 
trying to feed their families. 

Our nation was founded on the premise that, no matter one's origins, each 
person can better his or her lot in life. From the tenements of the Lower East 
Side to the border towns in Texas and Arizona, this nation was built on the 
sweat and toil of immigrants. Whether crossing the Atlantic or the Rio Grande, 
the American Dream comes at an often-perilous cost, and is realized only with 
hard work and determination.  Immigrants do not come to America because it is 
easy; they come to America to work hard and achieve the American Dream, if only 
we will let them.
 
Rep. Rahm Emanuel
Rep. Luis V. Gutierrez
Rep. Joe Baca
Rep. Henry A. Waxman
Rep. Silvestre Reyes
Rep. Gary Ackerman
Rep. Jose E. Serrano
Rep. Jan Schakowsky
Rep. Albio Sires
Rep. Ruben Hinojosa
Rep. Xavier Becerra 
Rep. Lucile Roybal-Allard
Rep. Nydia Velazquez
Rep. John Salazar
Rep. Hilda Solis
Rep. Grace Napolitano
Rep. Raul Grijalva
Rep. Solomon Ortiz
Rep. Ed Pastor
Rep. Howard Berman




-- 
Jorge Mujica






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