Lánzate 2024

Lánzate 2024

Come to the political and cultural festival for Latinx changemakers who are building a future rooted in justice, liberation, and el Buenvivir.

After Health Care Loss, Trump Goes to Long Island to Beat Up on Immigrants

In the wake of the defeat of repeal efforts to health care, Trump is taking to the campaign trail again. This time to Long Island to give a speech to argue for an increase in Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents.

Tania Unzueta, Legal and Policy Director for Mijente responded, “At a time when the administration is trying to defund health care, PBS, or almost all other government agencies over their supposed costs, it’s ridiculous to see it also trying to inflate ICE’s payroll.”

The group points to Trump’s use of the term ‘animals’ in a speech about immigration, Sessions’ use of the word ‘filth,’ and just yesterday ICE director Homan’s admission that he views all undocumented people as criminals to be targeted for deportation to describe an agency and administration actively fearmongering and running amok.  

While one ICE agent began to blow the whistle on a culture of discrimination and hostility inside the agency, the Washington Times reported that use-of-force by ICE agents is up by 150%.  

Unzueta continued, “What is becoming abundantly clear is that ICE is the public safety threat, not a solution to it. But today’s speech is not about sound policy or sane world views. Whether its Jeff “Too Racist” Sessions cracking down on sanctuary cities after being berated by his boss or Trump attacking us after losing the health care vote, immigrants are being used as this administration’s go-to to inflame its base and to compensate for its own failures.”

The environment, however, that the administration is creating is not lost on anti-immigrant extremists with the Governor of Texas now threatening to sue to end the DACA program for immigrant youth.  What is actually happening, the group says, is that Trump is using tactics familiar in history of attacking one group to dangerously isolate and make them vulnerable to attack.

Unzueta concludes, “We will not be anyone’s scapegoat and cities should not be bullied into being accomplices to a rogue agency following the orders of a rogue President. We’ll all be safer when government prioritizes investing in our communities instead of over-policing them.”

Jeff Sessions Should Stop Perpetuating the Lie that ICE is a Public Safety Agency, Cities Should Draw Line in the Sand After Latest Ultimatum.

In response to Attorney General Jeff Sessions ultimatum to cities who uphold the constitution and enact protections from Trump’s unleashed deportation force, Tania Unzueta, legal and policy director for Mijente, released the following statement:

“Session’s ultimatum is a line in the sand for cities that call themselves a ‘Sanctuary’ and for the immigrant rights movement. It is time to call for our cities to stand up to the federal government and resist any attempts to make our cities complicit in Trump’s deportation machine.

First, Jeff Sessions does not have the power to make ultimatums out of thin air. Before considering compliance, cities and advocates must question Session’s authority and motives to make such ultimatums.

Jeff Sessions should stop perpetuating the lie that ICE is a public safety agency. In fact, when its own agents are beginning to blow the whistle on an unchecked culture of discrimination, ICE is the agency that should see its budget cut, not our cities.  Raids do not make us safer. Tearing apart families does not make us safer. No one is safer by ICE agents breaking Wilmer Catalan-Ramirez’ arm in his home in Chicago and denying him medical care in detention, for example. And city officials giving in to bullying to be complicit Trump’s deportation force will not make us safer either.  

Finally, the ultimatum from Sessions points to threats of funding for policing. At a time when police are already receiving half of most cities budgets, this  should be used to rethink where we are investing instead of used to make city leaders cave to the Trump administration.”

With DACA & TPS Threatened & a Dream Act Introduced, How We Chart Our Way Forward Matters

In response to the introduction of the DREAM Act 2017, and the looming threat to DACA and TPS posed by DHS and the Texas Governor and Attorney General, the following can be attributed to Mijente:

From the second he descended from his tower, we knew that Trump would be a nightmare for immigrants and the people who buy into his false solutions.

Since his inauguration, ICE agents who feel emboldened and unbridled have increased the arrests of our loved ones by 40% more than their already high rates.  

The white supremacists in the White House will be happy to read that the terror they unleashed to combat the changing face of this country is having an effect – as short-term as their gains may be.

With our Justice Department handed over to a man who was considered too racist to be a judge, DHS Sec Kelley may move to end TPS and Governors like Abbott in Texas now see an opening to roll back the clock by attempting to take away the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program that so many of us fought so hard to win and has benefited nearly 800,000 undocumented young people, not to mention the families they support and the communities they contribute to.

But our community is not unfamiliar to threats. Threats to our lives is what drove many of us to migrate to the US to begin with. Threats to our future is what drove many of us to organize: for the DREAM Act sixteen years ago, for DACA five years ago, for an end to deportations three years ago, and every day of our lives.

Neither the threat nor the possibility of what could happen has ever defined us. The Republicans have defined themselves with hateful rhetoric, racism, and repression – including Lindsay Graham’s opening statements re-introducing the DREAM Act and applauding Trump yesterday. The Democrats insistence on compromising with them instead of presenting a real challenge has defined them and gotten us to where we are today.

Let what defines us be how we respond to this moment.  

Let’s seize clean opportunities and quickly condemn anything that turns a Dream into a nightmare, anything that would increase the criminalization of any of us.

While the bill today discusses “Dreamers,” whatever gets negotiated will impact many more in our houses so let us have our entire community at the forefront of this debate.

Let our victory not just be defined by the acts of politicians but in the strength we build from this round of the fight.

Winter is coming, winter may already be here. This is not a time for divided kingdoms.
So let us band together.