Dreamact News

El Senado bloquea el Dream Act para los Estudiantes
#1) Cuantos votos le Faltaron al Dream Act
Con 56 votos a favor y 43 en contra faltaron solo 4 votos para que
Aprobaran el Dream Act el dia de ayer en el Senado. Los Republicanos
Junto con 2 Democratas votaron en contra de la medida que era la ultima
Esperanza para mas de 2.1 millones de jovenes que pudieran calificar
#2) Cual es la controversia del Dream Act
Los Republicanos dicen que el Dream Act es una amnistia que premia
A los padres que trajieron a sus hijos indocumentados a los EEUU. Los
Democratas dicen que los jovenes no tienen ninguna culpa de haber venido
Con sus padres y que representan parte del futuro de nuestro pais
#3) Hay posibilidades en el futuro que sea aprobada
Democratas en el Senado prometieron presentar el Dream nuevamente en el
Senado pero es casi imposible que sea aprobada este ano. El Dream Act tiene
Mejores posibilidades de ser aprobada en el 2011 antes de las electiones del 2012
#4) Hay alguna buena noticia para los Inmigrantes
El dia de hoy se revelo un memorando interno de Inmigracion que puede ser implementado
Si el Congreso no aprueva una reforma migratoria el proximo ano. El memorando le daria
Mayores beneficios a los Inmigrantes incluyendo aprobaciones de visas aceleradas, reunificacion
Familiares, y menos deportaciones para aliviar la falta de una ley a favor de los inmigrantes
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Republicans stall immigration Dream Act
By Shankar Vedantam
Tuesday, September 21, 2010; 6:19 PM
Republican lawmakers on Tuesday stalled a Senate measure to allow children of undocumented immigrants to get on a path to citizenship, and accused the Obama administration of seeking amnesty for illegal immigrants through administrative changes within the Department of Homeland Security.
The so-called Dream Act
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/09/20/AR20100
92005704.html> to grant permanent residency to immigrants who were brought to the United States as children and who have completed some time in college or in the armed forces has been a sought-after goal for Democrats
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/custom/2006/03/31/CU200603
3101407.html> , who attached the measure to an important defense spending bill. Republicans used a procedural vote to block the bill. Immigration advocates accused Republicans of sacrificing the well-being of thousands of young people to cater to nativist sentiment.
Brent Wilkes, national executive director of the League of United Latin American Citizens, said the vote showed that the Republican party had “once again proven that when Latinos need support, they support a different constituency even when the constituency they are supporting does not have a dog in the fight. If my kids are legal and they are going to college, why would I want to stick it to my neighbor’s kids?”
Senate Democrats vowed to reintroduce the Dream Act, but odds of the measure becoming law this year are slim to non-existent.
In a day of fast-moving action, Republicans released a draft of a memo
<http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/documents/dhs_draft_mem
o_09222010.pdf> they said was composed by Department of Homeland Security staff to explore ways to create a more lenient immigration system, with expedited approvals for visas and family reunification, and measures to head off deportations of undocumented immigrants.
“Done right, a combination of benefit and enforcement-related measures could provide the Administration with a clear-cut political win,” the draft memo, dated Feb. 26, 2010, read. The draft, released by Republican senators to the media, did not list an an author. A Republican congressional staff member who asked for anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about the matter said the final memo was sent to DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano
<http://www.whorunsgov.com/Profiles/Janet_Napolitano> .
“We would need to give the legislative process enough time to play out to deflect against charges of usurping Congressional authority,” the 10-page memo said. Referring to the hopes for passing comprehensive immigration reform (CIR), it added, “announcement of such measures would have to wait until it was evident that no legislative action on CIR was possible by the current Congress. This is likely to mean the best time for administrative action will be late summer or fall — when the midterm election
<http://projects.washingtonpost.com/politicsglossary/election/midterm-el
ection/> season is in full swing.”
The idea that the department was seeking to administratively accomplish what Democratic lawmakers had failed to deliver legislatively was ludicrous, said Matt Chandler, a DHS spokesman.
“As we have said repeatedly, DHS will not grant deferred action or humanitarian parole to the nation’s illegal immigrant population,” he said in an e-mail, as he explained that the agency welcomed policy proposals from staff, but rejected bad ideas. Already, he added, immigration authorities’ “record-breaking enforcement statistics speak for themselves – removing more aliens in 2009 than in any prior year in the agency’s history and already surpassing records for criminal alien removals in 2010 – and demonstrate that we are doing more than ever before to enforce U.S. immigration laws. To be clear, we are not engaged in a ‘backdoor’ amnesty and are on pace to place more people in immigration proceedings this year than ever before.”
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