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    Hispanic CA Border Native to Head Obama's Immig. Policy Team

    Stanford professor leads Obama immigration team

    Tyche Hendricks, Chronicle Staff Writer

    Saturday, November 22, 2008

    Stanford law Professor Tino Cuéllar was named this week to lead President-elect Barack Obama's transition working group on immigration, putting him among the many scholars from the Bay Area who are helping shape the next administration.

    The team is one of seven policy groups Obama has convened to develop priorities for the first months of his presidency on topics ranging from education to the economy to national security.

    The task of overhauling the nation's immigration system stymied President Bush, who favored an approach combining tougher enforcement with legalization for the country's estimated 12 million undocumented immigrants and a guest worker program to allow low-skilled foreign workers to enter legally in the future. Congress twice hammered out "comprehensive" bills on the issue, but Bush lacked the political capital to get the measures passed.

    Obama must not only navigate the choppy political waters surrounding an immigration reform bill, but also address many related issues - whether to back an electronic workplace verification system up for reauthorization, how to tackle the unwieldy bureaucracy at the citizenship agency and whether to continue the current immigration enforcement raids.

    Through a law school spokeswoman, Cuéllar declined to be interviewed, but lawyers and immigration experts across the country praised him Friday for his intellect and his grasp of both regulatory minutiae and the big picture of American immigration policy.

    "He's brilliant beyond his years," said John Trasviña, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, who met Cuéllar when he was a law student at Yale and encouraged him to go to work in Washington.

    At 36, Cuéllar already has an impressive resume. Raised on the U.S.-Mexico border in Calexico (Imperial County), he earned his bachelor's degree at Harvard University before going to Yale Law School and finishing up with a doctorate in political science from Stanford, where he's now a full professor specializing in administrative law.

    Along the way, he spent two years at the U.S. Treasury Department under President Bill Clinton, where he worked on fighting money-laundering operations.

    Cuéllar has been described as a close adviser to Obama on immigration, and the American Bar Association recently suggested he could be on the short list to head the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services agency.

    "He has considerable experience in the federal government, and his academic work has focused on analysis of complex organizations and the way they administer and devise public policy," said Yale Law School Professor Peter H. Schuck, who was one of Cuéllar's teachers and counts him as a friend. "He'll bring a very keen eye for organizational performance and a very innovative mind."

    Cuéllar will co-lead the immigration policy group with Georgetown University Law Center Dean T. Alexander Aleinikoff, who was second in command at the Immigration and Naturalization Service during the Clinton years.

    While Aleinikoff's background in immigration law is deep, Cuéllar brings a broader perspective, said Muzaffar Chishti, a senior staff member at the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute in Washington.

    The fact that Cuéllar grew up on the border may mean he has strong views about the border fence currently being expanded by the Department of Homeland Security, said Chishti.

    "He also has ideas on how issues of trade and economic development (in other countries) implicate immigration movements," he said. "I think he will be very responsive to the concerns of American workers in the immigration debate."

    E-mail Tyche Hendricks at thendricks@sfchronicle.com.

    This article appeared on page B - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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    Senior Member jp_48504's Avatar
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    Added to Home PAge with Note

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    Senior Member butterbean's Avatar
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    "He's brilliant beyond his years," said John Trasviña, president of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, who met Cuéllar when he was a law student at Yale and encouraged him to go to work in Washington.
    This is outrageous! An Hispanic in charge of Immigration Policy! We all know how thats going to work!

    Of course John Trasvina thinks Cuellar is "brillant beyond his years". CUELLAR OUGHT TO BE DISQUALIFIED BECAUSE OF THE FACT THAT HE IS HISPANIC! He will base his policies on his "fellow people" and NO ONE ELSE.
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    Senior Member SOSADFORUS's Avatar
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    I think it is a damn conflict of interest!! what crap!

    If you think we were not heard before just wait.....the Obama administration is going to stealthly put through the special interest groups agenda with out going through congress, I can see it coming.

    And the taxpayers are going to eat it big! we are going to have to scream and it is going to have to be loud and clear.
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    gemini282's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by SOSADFORUS
    I think it is a damn conflict of interest!! what crap!

    If you think we were not heard before just wait.....the Obama administration is going to stealthly put through the special interest groups agenda with out going through congress, I can see it coming.

    And the taxpayers are going to eat it big! we are going to have to scream and it is going to have to be loud and clear.
    I see that it might happen but ultimately I believe the middle class will win because there is no USA, not even the NAU without the middle class Americans. The way the economy is and how many americans are out of work, to even think of passing any kind of amnesty or guest worker program will be political suicide because politicians are forgetting that we the middle class hold this country together not the welfare leeches or the rich upper class which is a dying breed. I'd like to see all these senators get themselves a pay raise when most of their constituents are on welfare, how is it going to work? Are they going to tax the welfare checks?

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