Wednesday, May 29th, 2013
Press Contact:
Thanu Yakupitiyage; New York Immigration Coalitiontyaku@thenyic.org; Office: 212-627-2227 x235; Cell: 413-687-5160
Video by Rafael Martínez Alequín
Campaign for Immigration Reform Intensifies as Immigrant Groups Launch ‘Remember November’ Campaign
Across Country, Groups Will Hold Voter Registration Drives, Town Halls and Meetings with Members of Congress
(New York, New York)-
Today, on the steps of City Hall in New York City, New Yorkers for Real
Immigration Reform, a statewide coalition of 150 business, labor, faith
and grassroots organizations coordinated by the New York Immigration
Coalition, held a press conference to launch ‘Remember November,’ a
series of actions in the next phase to pass immigration reform. The
campaign was joined by Congressman José Serrano, a member of the
Congressional Hispanic Caucus and longstanding advocate for immigration
reform.
During the current congressional
recess, participating groups in the New York campaign will hold 19
Remember November events across the state, joining with advocacy groups
in 30 states that will hold more than 100 voter registration rallies,
town hall meetings, marches and congressional visits. The goal is to amp
up the pressure on Congress to fix the nation’s broken immigration
system and provide a path to citizenship for the 11 million undocumented
immigrants living in the U.S.
Among the 19 events organized by
the New York campaign will be a protest this evening at a fundraiser
featuring Senator Ted Cruz of Texas. He has been a vocal opponent of a
path to citizenship and voted against the Senate immigration bill in the
Senate Judiciary Committee last week. The bill ultimately passed out of
Committee with bipartisan support and is expected to reach the Senate
floor for a vote in early June.
At the press conference,
Congressman Serrano, together with Latino and immigrant leaders from New
Yorkers for Real Immigration Reform, urged opponents of a path to
citizenship to “Remember November” and stressed that voters would hold
accountable those who delay immediate action on reform.
“After years of delay and a
decisive election where the American people spoke clearly, it is time
for comprehensive immigration reform,” said Congressman José E. Serrano.
“Families cannot continue to be broken apart while anti-immigrant
forces try to defeat the bill. The time is now to move forward and help
people live a life free of the fear of deportation; a life with a clear
future that includes full citizenship.”
“Last November, Latino, Asian,
and immigrant communities voted in record numbers. We have waited for
seven months and are here today to say the time has come for Congress to
deliver on immigration reform,” said Guillermo Chacon, member
of the executive committee of the board of directors of the New York
Immigration Coalition and executive director of the Latino Commission on
AIDS. “We are pleased that the Senate is acting on immigration
reform, but we must now see meaningful action from the House of
Representatives. Immigrant communities are fighting to keep their
families together, and they will not forgive or forget those who stood
in the way of measures that would end the separation of immigrant
families.”
“As national momentum for real
immigration reform grows stronger by the day, lawmakers in Washington
D.C. need to know that millions of immigrant voters across the country
are playing close attention. This defining issue will serve as a litmus
test for voters as they decide who has upheld this country’s economic
and moral values and who they will hold accountable for failed
leadership.” said Milan Bhatt, co-executive director, Worker Justice Center of NY.
"Millions of American voters of
Russian and other Slavic and East European origins, together with
Latinos, Asians, and other Americans from all walks of life, are looking
forward to a timely passage of a just and humane, truly comprehensive,
and bipartisan immigration reform bill by the U.S. Congress,” said Dmitri Daniel Glinski, president & CEO, Russian-Speaking Community Council of Manhattan & the Bronx, Inc.
“We are proud and grateful that the Senators representing the states
where most of us live and vote have shown true leadership in the
drafting and the markup of a bill that, on the whole, meets the hopes of
many millions of hard-working, law-abiding immigrants and the needs of
our country. We urge the House of Representatives to do its part. Our
communities will judge their representatives at the polls based on their
contribution to a reform package that provides a realistic path to
citizenship for undocumented immigrants, strengthens equal opportunity
and anti-discrimination in the workplace, and creates institutions to
promote immigrant integration that are representative of the richness
and diversity of all our communities."
“Today, our campaign for real
immigration reform sends a message to Congress to remember November.
Remember the record number of immigrant voters who turned out last
November to break the political gridlock in DC and revive the momentum
for immigration reform,” said S.J. Jung, president of the MinKwon Center for Community Action.
“With the ever-increasing power of the immigrant electorate, we will
continue to push for real immigration reform that keeps families
together. We are troubled to see that the Senate bill eliminates the
rights of U.S. citizens to sponsor their siblings and older adult
children. These are among the most popular and backlogged family visa
categories, with the Philippines and Mexico having the longest waits.
Elimination of these categories adversely impacts immigrants of all
ethnicities, as well as Americans. By keeping families together,
immigration reform will put our nation firmly on a path of prosperity
and security for all.”
"As voters and as people of
conscience, we ask Congress to remember all of the families victim to a
broken immigration system; we ask Congress to remember their commitment
to uphold our nation’s values of fairness; and we ask Congress to
remember that we are mobilizing, we are organizing and we are watching
the immigration debate very closely," said Faiza Ali, advocacy & civic engagement coordinator at Arab American Association of NY. "We will not forget those who stand for policies that continue to tear families apart and disregard our rights."
"Immigration policies are a
major concern for the Asian American community. Two out of three Asian
Americans who voted in the November 2012 elections favor comprehensive
immigration reform, including a path to citizenship for the
undocumented,” Mae Lee, executive director of the Chinese Progressive Association.
“In the past few years, the number of Asian New Yorkers who are
eligible to vote has grown 53%. We will be working to register new
voters in our community so that we can join all New Yorkers to exercise
our right to vote this fall and in years to come."
“The passage of the immigration
bill through the Senate Judiciary Committee gives us hope for the future
of comprehensive immigration reform. The bill is a compromise, but this
is a compromise that is worth protecting,” said Juan Cartagena, president and general counsel, Latino Justice.
“We have spent decades building up the people power and support for
comprehensive immigration reform and we will continue to mobilize our
communities, hold the line, and hold Congress accountable to pass the
strongest and most inclusive bill possible. We want them to know that we
are watching and that we will remember November as we move this bill
forward.”
“Latino and immigrant
communities voted in unprecedented numbers last November to keep
families together and fix our broken immigration system. This is our
number one priority and we want to work with leaders in Congress that
will stand up and act for family unity and a path to citizenship for
all,” said Javier Valdes, co-executive director of Make the Road NY.
“Immigrant communities and our allies are organizing to have an even stronger impact on the upcoming elections,” said Gonzalo Mercado, executive director of El Centro del Inmigrante.
“As we get closer to making the passage of immigration reform a
reality, we call on everyone to remember the impact that immigrants made
last November.”
Click HERE for a list of local events happening across New York.
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