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  1. #1
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    Immigrants, Supporters to Take to Streets

    http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld ... -headlines

    Immigrants, Supporters to Take to Streets
    By Nicole Gaouette
    Times Staff Writer

    6:36 PM PDT, August 31, 2006

    WASHINGTON -- Immigrants and their supporters will take to the streets Friday to start a weeklong encore of the rallies that brought millions out last spring. But as they prepare marches in Chicago, Washington, Phoenix and Los Angeles, immigration advocates are facing a less friendly political climate in the nation's capital.

    Although Congress may take up immigration when it returns next week, few on Capitol Hill are optimistic about passing legislation before November's midterm elections. And any new initiatives are likely to focus on enforcement, not on providing more legal options for illegal immigrants.

    In some political campaigns, hard-liners are embracing immigration as a way to rally voters and target opponents who favor a broad rewrite of existing laws.

    In response, advocates are making the rallies more explicitly political, incorporating voter registration drives aimed at affecting tight races in November -- along with reminders that the Hispanic community, in particular, will watch what politicians say.

    "We know the issue is being used politically," said Jaime Contreras, chairman of the National Capitol Immigration Coalition, which expects more than 500,000 demonstrators to crowd onto the National Mall Thursday. "Our community understands that we haven't won the war yet, that it will probably go into next year."

    House Republicans are also on the offensive, tying immigration to the larger issue of national security as part of their election year campaign strategy.

    "From homeland security to national security to border security, House Republicans will focus first and foremost on addressing the safety and security needs of the American people," House Majority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, said in announcing the GOP legislative agenda for September.

    It's too early to determine how many races will feature immigration as an issue, said National Republican Congressional Committee spokesman Carl Forti. But in a few tight and closely watched contests, it is already a factor.

    In the Sept. 12 Republican primary to succeed retiring Arizona Rep. Jim Kolbe, a moderate on immigration who backed a candidate with similar views, the perceived front-runner is a Minuteman member named Randy Graf.

    In TV ads that began airing Aug. 23, Graf links illegal immigration to drugs, criminals and terrorists. "I fear not only for the safety of my family, but for all Americans. National security begins with border security," Graf says.

    At the nation's northern border, Michigan's Republican Senate candidate Mike Bouchard told TV viewers that he was "a 20-year lawman. Anything that starts with illegal I'm going to be against."

    And in a highly competitive House race in Iowa, Republican candidate Mike Whalen blasted his primary opponent's immigration record. "Illegal aliens are flooding into our country," a voice in one ad intones. "Why? Because politicians like Bill Dix give them special benefits like lowered tuition costs."

    In many areas with tight races, the House leadership has also held summer hearings on immigration that helped highlight the hard-line stance of local Republican candidates.

    Democrats say that the GOP emphasis on immigration is misguided.

    "It is a major issue, but it's not number one," said Dan Burton, spokesman for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee. He cited Iraq, health care and gas prices as other issues that concern voters.

    Burton noted that currently only six markets are running with paid ads about immigration, though that will likely increase.

    Moreover, Burton said, Republicans are vulnerable on immigration since they have controlled Congress for the last decade.

    When Congress reconvenes, both sides are expected to dig in their heels.

    Like President Bush, the Senate backs a broad overhaul of immigration laws, including citizenship provisions for undocumented immigrants. The House passed an enforcement-only bill. Staffers say there have been few behind-the-scenes talks to bridge the divide and Democrats in Congress are openly skeptical.

    "Without the president seriously engaging and forcing the Republican leadership on the House side to conference, it won't happen," said Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D-Texas, commenting on the chances of legislation passing before November.

    Boehner spokesman Kevin Madden disagreed. "I wouldn't count it out," he said.

    Madden said that the House hearings on immigration held around the country made it clear that the public wants "a bill that puts a premium on enforcement."

    The marches -- which include events in Phoenix Monday and Los Angeles on Sept. 9 -- are intended to tell Congress that enforcement is not enough.

    The events will kick off in Chicago on Friday, when marchers set out from Chinatown on a four-day, 45-mile walk that will end with a rally at the Batavia, Ill., office of House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill.

    On Saturday, the marchers will stop in Dupage County, in a district being vacated by Rep. Henry J. Hyde, R-Ill., and hotly contested by Republican state senator Peter Roskam and Major Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat, an Iraq war veteran and the daughter of a Thai immigrant.
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  2. #2
    Senior Member Brian503a's Avatar
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    http://www.latimes.com/news/printeditio ... california

    Thousands to Join Labor Day Rallies
    Events include marches in downtown L.A. and Wilmington. Workers will press for immigrant rights and better wages.
    By Teresa Watanabe
    Times Staff Writer

    August 31, 2006

    Thousands of workers and their advocates are expected to hold rallies throughout Southern California over the Labor Day weekend, pressing for immigrant rights, middle-class wages and other causes.

    Some immigrant rights advocates plan to march through downtown Los Angeles on Saturday in support of legalizing undocumented migrants and registering citizens to vote. The participants, some of whom were involved in the massive pro-immigrant march downtown on March 25, plan to walk from Broadway and Olympic Boulevard to City Hall beginning at 11 a.m.

    Workers will gather Monday for their traditional Labor Day breakfast at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in downtown Los Angeles, followed by a 10 a.m. Mass celebrated by Cardinal Roger M. Mahony.

    The events will focus on "rebuilding Los Angeles' middle class" through campaigns to organize security guards, hotel workers and port drivers, said Mary Gutierrez, spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor.

    In Wilmington, thousands of union members and their supporters plan to gather Monday for their 27th annual Labor Day march and rally. The march is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. at Broad and E streets, followed by a rally at Banning Park, at Pacific Coast Highway and Eubank Avenue.

    The rally will feature updates on various labor issues, including upcoming contract negotiations involving longshore workers, engineers, architects, port drivers and others, said Miguel Lopez of the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor Labor Coalition.

    "Our main focus is labor uniting around all workers' rights, including immigrants'," he said.

    Also Monday, several immigrant women's groups plan to hold a march in downtown Los Angeles in support of immigrant families.

    The group, which plans to march at noon from Olympic and Broadway to City Hall, will urge a moratorium on the deportation of families with U.S. citizen children, said Gloria Saucedo of Hermandad Mexicana of Panorama City.

    We Are America, a national coalition of labor, faith-based and immigrant rights groups, will hold a rally and vigil in Los Angeles on Sept. 9 to urge Congress to pass an immigration reform bill.

    The coalition is urging Congress to legalize undocumented immigrants, provide more family and work visas and strengthen protections against immigrant abuse.

    The rally is planned as part of the first National Latino Congreso, scheduled Sept. 6 to 10 in Los Angeles.

    The convention, billed as the first comprehensive gathering of Latino leaders and community members in nearly 30 years, will feature the rally to cap a "Justice for Immigrants" day of discussion and workshops on Sept. 9.

    "We're very concerned that Congress has basically frozen the process and not done anything about comprehensive reform," said Angela Sanbrano of the Central American Resource Center in Los Angeles. "We're calling on Congress to take up this issue seriously when they return from Labor Day break."
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