On Saturday, March 19th, Mijente’s field director, Jacinta Gonzalez, was arrested during the #StopTrump protest that blocked roads leading to his rally in the neighborhood that is home to Sheriff Arpaio and other anti-immigrant officials.
Watch her interview on Democracy Now where she discusses the Trump effect on state policy, her arrest, and the subsequent racial profiling that led to her transfer to immigration authorities despite being a US citizen.
Yesterday a multiracial coalition of immigrant rights, faith, labor and local activists peacefully rallied as well as shut down both of the main roads leading to Donald Trump’s event to stand #UnitedAgainstHate and protest the racist violence his campaign is causing.
Among those arrested at the rally was Jacinta Gonzalez, field director for Mijente, who had locked her neck to a vehicle blocking the principal route to the rally.
However, unlike the two other arrestees, Gonzalez, who is a citizen of the U.S., wasn’t released last night. Instead she was transferred to federal deportation agents to investigate her immigration status as a result of her Latino surname.
“The two others were able to go home but because of my last name I was questioned by ICE and transferred to their custody.” Gonzalez explains, “As I was trying to defend my rights inside, I saw the faces of two children in one of the holding cell. We’re going to continue to fight, to say #Not1More, and Dump Trump.”
In a statement released the previous day, protesters pointed to the Trump effect as cause for a package of anti-immigrant laws being proposed in Arizona’s statehouse – including those sponsored by the husband of Linda Kavanagh, the Mayor of Fountain Hills where the Trump rally was planned.
“In Arizona we’ve heard Trump’s hate before and we know where it gets us,” said Carlos Garcia, Executive Director of Puente Arizona in reference to the 2010 SB1070 that cost the state $200 million after a boycott and caused international embarrassment as the state became synonymous with racism. “The Trump effect isn’t just about a candidate. Trump’s ugly rhetoric is being turned into policy proposals as we speak that threaten the wholeness of our families and the safety of our communities. All people of conscience have to unite to stop it.”
“People will not sit quietly as Trump campaigns to move us back in the shadows, to the back of the bus, or back in the closet,” adds Marisa Franco, director of Mijente, a national hub for Latino organizing involved in the protest today. “The greatest act of love we can show is to shut down hate where it rears its head and demand that we do better than the cheap politics and false solutions that Trump is peddling. The billionaire may want to pit poor people against each other but our necks are not available for standing on.”
As we continue to organize toshut down Donald Trump’s racist rhetoric wherever he goes (I hear he is going toPhoenix, Arizona real soon. Hint, hint!), it is crucial to remember one of the most dangerous parts of the Trump effect: The amazing amount of space it opens up for racists and xenophobes to portray themselves as legitimate analysts and policy-makers while pushing conservative, anti-immigrant, anti-Latinx, anti-Black, anti-gay, anti-queer, and anti-women agendas.
At the same time, with the Democrats or the usually progressives, more #Trumpazos give them a chance to point the finger at how terrible he is and look good in comparison, while not doing anything for those they are supposed to represent or actually promoting policies that are harmful to our communities.
When it comes to legislative and electoral politics, the result has been a new round of policy changes and electoral campaigns in 2016 proposing to make our communities unwelcoming to refugees, erase local protections for immigrants from raids and deportation, increase criminalization of immigration, and hyper-target non-citizens who have any encounter with law enforcement and can be labeled as “felons not families,” as President Obama so eloquently put it. For your information and general planning this Spring, here is a list of the top 5 electoral and legislative fights to watch:
1. The Latinx Cook County State’s Attorney Who Covered Up Laquan McDonald’s Murder is Up for Re-Election in Chicago
Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez became a national target after it was revealed that shewaited over 400 daysto bring charges against the Chicago Police officer who shot and killed Laquan McDonald, shooting him 16 times. But Alvarez hasa long track record of looking the other way in cases of police misconduct and over-charging poor people and people of color.Other examples of her behavior include sentencing children to life without parole, charging victims of violence and witnesses — especially when the complaint is about police misconduct, undercharging thepolice officer who shot and killed Rekia Boyd, and refusing to prosecute Richard Fiorito, another Chicago Police officer who falsely arrested over130 people for drunk driving with hints of homophobia. She is also against anindependent police accountability council or appointing an independent prosecutor to investigate police-involved shootings.
The #ByeAnita campaign in Chicago made the clearest connection between Trump’s rhetoric and Alvarez last Saturday when at the same time as thousands shut down the Trump rally, a group led by queer, young Black women closed down traffic a block away stating, “If you are saying ‘Dump Trump,’ then say ‘bye Anita too’ and vote her out. Vote Anita out.” One of the leading groups, Assata’s Daughterswrote in a statement, “We see a direct link between Trump’s overtly racist white nationalist campaign an Anita Alvarez’s record of filling jails and prisons with black bodies using dogwhistle tough-on-crime rhetoric.”
Immigrants and members of theLatinx community have also called her out. As one Chicagowriter puts it, “She certainly looks like us,” but continues, “Because Alvarez is relying on the Latino vote, on election day Chicago needs the Latinos against Alvarez to come out for what’s right.” The election for Cook County State’s Attorney in Chicago is today, Tuesday March 15
2. Arizona’s SB 1070-style Legislation with a Vengeance, Looking to “Fill Up Arizona’s Jails with Immigrants”
In Arizona there is a new round of legislation making its way through State government. Prompting the #NoMoreSB1070s, local organizers are comparing the bills to when Arizona took center stage in 2010 withSenate Bill 1070 andSheriff Joe Arpaio’s raids, both which terrorized and criminalized entire communities in Arizona. This time around, there are dozens of legislative proposals in the state legislature designed to roll back wins by immigrant rights advocates and make anti-immigrant and criminal laws even harsher for non-citizens. Amongst the bills to look out for are House Bill 2370 which would allow thestate to deny help to refugees if they haven’t gone through multiple background checks, Senate Bill 1377and House Bill2451, which together would require that undocumented immigrants and others in deportation proceedings must serve the maximum and full sentences for criminal charges, regardless of good behavior, eligibility for parole, or even whether they are to be deported after their sentence is over. These two bills aredescribed by local organizers as “going against the movement to reduce incarceration by aiming to fill up Arizona’s jails with immigrants.”
HB 2370 passed in two house committees in January 2015. SB 1377 passed the Democratic and Republican committees and went on to the house in February 2015, while HB2451 passed the equivalent committees in the House, and the rules committee in the Senate in March 2015.Sign a petition against the criminalization bills SB 1377 and HB 2451 here. If you’re in Arizona, Puente Human Rights Movement iscalling for a mass mobilization outside the state’s capitol on Wednesday March 23, 2016.
3. Georgia Wants to Increase Penalties for Driving Without a License, and Take Away Driver’s Licenses for Immigrant Youth
Undocumented youth in the state of Georgia can’t get a break this legislative season. Just as thestate supreme court affirmed the ban of undocumented students from Georgia’s universities in early February, the state legislature is now considering taking away driver’s licenses for undocumented youth who qualify under the President’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.Senate Bill 6is designed to take away driver’s licenses from DACA recipients, and replace them with “driver’s safety cards,” making them a clear target for profiling.
In addition the bill proposes releasing personal information of all non-citizens to government agencies and increases fines and penalties for people driving without a license. This is a big deal in Georgia not just for undocumented youth, as manyLatinx residents have documented racial profiling by local police who are looking for undocumented immigrants who can’t get driver’s licenses, to charge them and criminalize them. Under a current law, Senate Bill 350, repeat arrests for driving without a license are already felonies, and require immigrants to pay high amounts of money in fines and court costs. Many of those Latinx residents havebeen put in deportation proceedings as a result.
SB 6was passed by the Georgia State senate in February 2016, and is currently under consideration in the House. The Georgia Latino Alliance for Human Rights (GLAHR) is calling for a demonstration, “Rally en defensa de nuestras familias y comunidad” for Thursday March 25, 2016 at Liberty Plaza in Atlanta, Georgia, behind the State capitol. Follow #SB6 #StopSB6 or #Not1More.
It’s worth noting also that up to 5 days ago, Georgia was consideringResolution 675 which createda constitutional amendment to declare English as the “official language” of Georgia and prohibited discrimination, penalties or limits of participation against people who only speak English. It passed in the Senate, but wasblocked in the House in March of 2016.
4. Louisiana Proposing to Roll Back Protection from Deportation for Immigrants
Less than a month ago theNew Orleans Congress of Day Laborers celebrated a “bias-free”policy that forbids city police officers from asking information about immigration status or collaborating with immigration enforcement to deport and criminalize immigrants. “ICE has been recognized as the largest unaccountable law enforcement agency in the U.S. Any police force that wants to move toward accountability—and make its communities more safe—should start by ending collusion with ICE,” they said. The very next day, Republican Representative Valerie Hodges filedHouse Bill 151, whichwould make it illegal for cities or other localities to put limits on cooperation with Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and blacklist those that do from state grants and other funding.
The rhetoric in defense of this bill is full of statements like, “Local enforcement agencies who adopt a policy to protect criminals, we are not going to give you funding.” If passed, this bill would not only threaten the city policy, it would also put into question the Orleans Parish Sheriff’s policies of non-collaboration, on which the city policy is based. Both of these are a result of longgrassroots campaigns documenting racial profiling of immigrant workers and abuses by police officers and the Sheriff’s department,exacerbated by their collaboration with immigration enforcement. HB 151 isbeing considered by the Committee on Judiciary and will be discussed over the next three months in the Louisiana State legislature. #Right2Remain #Not1More
5. Wisconsin Takes Back ID Cards, Also Wants to Limit “Sanctuary Cities”
Last but not least we go back to the Midwest, where the Wisconsin legislature is consideringAssembly Bill 450, which would punish prohibitions on asking about immigration status or any limits on cooperation with immigration enforcement by decreasing funding, andSenate Bill 533 prohibiting localities from issuing ID cards to undocumented immigrants or people who don’t have access to adequate documents or money. The billis described as “a bigoted attack on immigrants, transgender people, the homeless, seniors, formerly incarcerated people and the thousands of low-income people in Milwaukee and throughout the state who cannot access a Wisconsin state ID.”
“Wisconsin’s fight reminds us that Latino and immigrant workers are willing to flex their economic power to send the message the they will not stand idly by while politicians try to pass laws that threaten their families and take for granted their labor.”
They are the same ones that organized the “A Day Without Latinos and Immigrants in Wisconsin” which turned out thousands to the Wisconsin State capitol in February against this “racist anti-immigrant” legislation. Evendairy workers have expressed their discontent with the bills.
The Assembly passed AB 450 in February, but has not been voted on in State Senate. SB 533 passed in the Senate also in February. Both Wisconsin the Assembly and the Senate have republican majorities.Voces de La Frontera and One Wisconsin Now hosted a petition against both AB 450 and SB 533.
Bonus Policy Round
Congrats to folks inFlorida who defeated nine anti-immigrant bills last FridayMarch 11, 2016. Amongst the bills was House Bill 675 which would have required government entities, including schools, to cooperate with immigration enforcement; House Bill 1095 which would have barred state agencies from helping immigrants and refugees, and Senate Bill 118 which made it a first-degree felony for any person with a deportation order to live in Florida punishable with a maximum 30 years in prison and $10,000 in fines. #WeAreFlorida #SomosFlorida.