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  1. #1
    Senior Member lorrie's Avatar
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    Mexican Government Assisting Immigrants To Become US Citizens To Oppose Donald Trump

    Mexican Government Assisting Immigrants To Become
    US Citizens To Oppose Donald Trump


    Officially, Mexico says it respects U.S. sovereignty and has no strategy to influence the result of the presidential race. Yet Mexican
    diplomats are mobilizing for the first time to assist immigrants in gaining U.S. citizenship, hosting free workshops on naturalization.



    by Geoffrey Grider
    April 26, 2016

    Mexico is mounting an unprecedented effort to turn its permanent residents in the U.S. into citizens, a status that would enable them to vote —
    presumably against Donald Trump


    EDITOR’S NOTE: The free ride that illegal Mexican immigrants have gotten over the last 7 years with the Obama administration threatens to come to a
    swift and sudden end with the election of Donald Trump as president. Not content with the idea of the end of the gravy train, Mexico makes the bold and
    unprecedented move of mobilizing to assist illegals to become American citizens for the sole intent of voting against Trump in November.

    Officially, Mexico says it respects U.S. sovereignty and has no strategy to influence the result of the presidential race. Yet Mexican diplomats are
    mobilizing for the first time to assist immigrants in gaining U.S. citizenship
    , hosting free workshops on naturalization.

    Mexico Helping People Become U.S. Citizens Before Election:



    “This is a historic moment where the Mexican consulate will open its doors to carry out these types of events in favor of the Mexican community,”
    Adrian Sosa, a spokesman for the consulate in Chicago, said before an event on March 19. In Dallas, about 250 permanent residents attended the consulate’s
    first “citizenship clinic” in February and another 150 in its second in March. In Las Vegas, the turnout topped 500.

    Underscoring the fine line that separates participation from interfering in another country’s election, Sosa noted that the consulate only hosts the
    event but it’s community organizations who offer the advice.


    Mexico may have the most at stake but it’s not alone among U.S. allies bewildered by — and worried about — the reality-television star’s success in the
    Republican primaries. Trump, who launched his campaign with invective directed at Mexico and a promise to build a border wall (with a “big beautiful door”),
    identified himself last week as his own top foreign-policy adviser.

    With even senior U.S. Republicans, such as 2012 presidential candidate Mitt Romney, pledging to contest Trump’s nomination to the end, views from other
    major capitals comprise both concern and calm. An official close to Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe who asked not be named because he was not
    authorized to speak publicly said a Trump presidency would be a risk for the global economy and security. Trump has targeted Japan, along with Mexico
    and China, as nations where the U.S. is “getting absolutely crushed on trade.”

    The government in China still believes it’s too early to focus on Trump given that he hasn’t yet won the Republican nomination, according to a Foreign Ministry
    official who asked not to be named. The sentiment is shared in France, where President Francois Hollande’s administration says that the U.S. election takes a
    backseat to addressing migrant crisis, the war in Syria and terrorism threats.

    Right to Vote

    Joel Diaz doesn’t want to wait to see how it all turns out. The Mexican-American, who has been a permanent resident of the U.S. for six years, arrived at the
    Mexican consulate in Chicago on Saturday with his wife and four adult sons to register all of them as U.S. citizens in order to vote against Trump.

    “We’re very worried,” Diaz, 47, an evangelical pastor, said. “If he wins there will be a lot of damage against a lot of people here, and to us as Hispanics, as Mexicans.”

    Laura Espinosa, deputy consul in Mexico’s consulate in Las Vegas, said the main goal of the program is citizenship, and while that includes the right to vote, the
    government doesn’t press people to do so. “Those who use this to vote, that’s up to each individual,” said Espinosa, who confirmed that most consulates have
    begun citizenship campaigns. “We don’t have any opinion on that, because that would be totally interfering in internal affairs of the country.”

    Candidate Trump highlighted the ease of gaining U.S. citizenship. “Do you know how tough it is to become a citizen in Mexico? One of the toughest places on
    Earth,” he said at a press conference. “So I could understand why the officials in Mexico want people to vote against me. But I’ll tell you, the Mexican people
    like me,” he said.

    The government in Mexico City is holding off on engaging the Trump campaign directly until he becomes the nominee, said Francisco Guzman, chief of staff to
    Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto. Speaking with reporters on March 1, Guzman said the government plans to communicate with the campaigns of the
    nominees once they’re chosen and try to dispel what it considers misinformation about Mexico and Mexicans.

    Campaign Rhetoric

    The public-relations offensive now under way includes using news outlets and social media to highlight the strides Mexicans have made in business, the arts
    and academia in the U.S., said Paulo Carreno, the former spokesman of Citigroup Inc.’s Mexico unit who oversees the country’s international branding strategy.

    Promoting Mexico in the U.S., from its scholars to artists, is meant “not to influence an election, but a whole generation and those that follow,” Carreno said
    in an e-mailed response to questions. “The strategy will be an important anchor in our consular network in the country.”

    While Guzman said the administration understands the difference between campaign rhetoric and governing proposals, Pena Nieto this month in an interview
    with newspaper El Universal compared Trump’s rhetoric to that of Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini.

    The urgency and their numbers underscore why Mexican-Americans can have an impact.

    About 12 million Mexicans live in the U.S. and almost half lack legal status, according to a November study by the Pew Research Center. About 2.7 million
    legal Mexican permanent residents of the U.S. are eligible to apply to become citizens, according to The New Americans Campaign, a nonpartisan group that
    helps people access naturalization services.

    Ali Noorani, executive director of National Immigration Forum, a non-partisan Washington-based policy group that advocates on behalf of immigrants, said
    Trump’s rhetoric and proposals have spurred interest in registering to vote among Mexican immigrant communities, particularly in Nevada, Colorado and Virginia.

    Boosting turnout among immigrant voters could help tip the scale in the election, said Julian Zelizer, a professor of history and public affairs at Princeton University.

    “Trump is exactly the kind of Republican who could mobilize legalized immigrant voters and others sympathetic to liberalized immigration policy,” Zelizer said in an
    e-mailed response to questions. “This has been one issue where he has not been very vague and taking an extremely tough and aggressive stance. I suspect
    that if he was the nominee you could see very high turnout in certain states for Democrats as a result of this issue.” source


    http://www.nowtheendbegins.com/mexic...-donald-trump/
    Last edited by lorrie; 04-27-2016 at 04:16 PM.

  2. #2
    Senior Member Judy's Avatar
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    Time to get tough, we need US some Trump, because dual citizens with loyalty to their home country instead of ours take over our country. Mexico is like Ted Cruz, a Wiley Coyote country, always planning some scheme to get something they aren't entitled to.
    A Nation Without Borders Is Not A Nation - Ronald Reagan
    Save America, Deport Congress! - Judy

    Support our FIGHT AGAINST illegal immigration & Amnesty by joining our E-mail Alerts at https://eepurl.com/cktGTn

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