Tuesday, January 13, 2009

A last kick in the face by Bush - Immigration

Today's NY Times tells us about the latest moments of the Bush administration and how it wants to leave its mark among immigrants:

New York Times:  "And last week, Attorney General Michael Mukasey, in an appalling last-minute ruling, declared that immigrants do not have the constitutional right to a lawyer in a deportation hearing and thus have no right to appeal on the grounds of bad legal representation. Mr. Mukasey overturned a decades-old practice designed to ensure robust constitutional protection for immigrants — one needed now more than ever in the days of the Bush administration’s assembly-line prosecutions."

Is this something that Obama will be able to rescind once he is in office?

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Editorial
New York Times
January 13, 2009

Immigration

A scene from the last days of the Bush administration: On a snowy afternoon last weekend, a church in New York City is filled to bursting with more than 1,000 people. Parents holding babies, teenagers, old men and women with heavy coats and canes. They murmur and shout in prayer, a keyboard and guitar carrying their voices to the height of the vaulted ceiling.

The music has a deafening buoyancy, but as congregants step forward to speak, their testimony is heavy with foreboding and sorrow. They tell of families terrorized and split apart.

A young woman from Pakistan describes humiliating conditions at a detention center in Elizabeth, N.J., where she was sent with her mother and ailing father. A mother tells of her son, an Army sergeant and citizen, losing his wife to deportation. A Mexican man, with theatrical defiance, waves a shoe at the unnamed forces that have thwarted his desire to legalize.

It is hard to appear sinister in a church, and the congregation at Iglesia La Sinagoga, a center of Pentecostalism on 125th Street in East Harlem, seemed utterly ordinary. But as undocumented immigrants and their loved ones, they are the main targets of the Bush administration’s immigration war.

Families like theirs have endured a relentless campaign of intimidation and expulsion, organized at the top levels of the federal government and haphazardly delegated to state and local governments.

The campaign has been disproportionate and cruel. The evidence is everywhere..
.more

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

VOTE FOR THE DREAM ACT!

This is CHANGE.GOV not CHANGE.ORG

NEW CONTEST!

http://citizensbriefingbook.change.gov/ideas/viewIdea.apexp?id=087800000004m3z&srPos=0&srKp=087

sarrbear said...

Dear Dream ACT Texas,

The country is buzzing. We will watch history unfold as Barack Obama takes office next week. January 20th will usher in a New Day for America and a renewed hope for Just and Humane Immigration Reform.

Now is our time to take action and push for change.

In Washington, DC on the first day of the new administration we will hold a day of ACTION for immigrants’ rights. We need you to be a part of it.

• DONATE: Click here to DONATE to help make the day of action possible. As little as $5 will help us in our goal to create a New America that includes immigrants.
• TEXT: Want to receive mobile updates? Text “Justice” [“Justicia” for Spanish] to 69866.
• GET OTHERS INVOLVED: Pass this message on to your friends, family and colleagues. (If you are messaging groups – say members here instead)
• MARCH: If you will be in DC for the inauguration, come join us on the day of the action. For details visit www.ANewDayforImmigration.org

January 21st will be a New Day for Immigration in this country, but change won’t happen without you. Can we count on you to stand up for immigrants?

Visit www.anewdayforimmigration.org to DONATE and join the movement.

In solidarity,
Sarah Regenspan