DREAMing? Time running out on DREAM Act

Published December 08, 2010

President Barack Obama, here listening to a question during a news conference in the White House, supports the DREAM Act.

The clock is ticking away on the DREAM Act.

Senate Democrats will give a last-minute push Wednesday in an effort to advance the legislation, which would pave the way toward legalization for foreign-born youngsters, before the congressional session ends -- and their window of opportunity closes for what could be years.

Democrats and pro-immigrant Hispanic advocates have pushing for the DREAM Act, seeing as a crucial first step toward comprehensive immigration reform. About 30 undocumented students and activists held a demonstration Tuesday, complete with a mock check worth $2.3 billion -- the amount they say would flow in public coffers if the measure is approved.

"We've come to deliver these checks to legislators, which represent the economic benefit of the DREAM Act," Erica Andiola, a 23-year-old graduate of Arizone State University, told EFE. "We're here to contribute to this country that has seen us grow up."

Many Republicans and anti-immigrant groups, however, see the measure as a form of amnesty. And with the GOP taking control of the House and a stronger minority in the Senate next year, the legislation would likely die, at least for several years.

Conservative protestors on Tuesday called the DREAM Act shouldn't be passed while the country's unemployment rate is so high.

"This is rewarding illegal conduct...Our children are the ones who are suffering from unemployment, and they would be competing for jobs with people who are not supposed to be in this country," Carmen Pérez Morales, an activist with Progressives for Immigration Reform, told EFE.

President Barack Obama's team has made an intense public push for the bill, under pressure from Hispanic activists angry that the White House has not pressed harder for a broad immigration overhaul to give several million illegal immigrants a shot at legal status.

In recent days, the administration dispatched officials from the Departments of Defense, Homeland Security and Commerce to argue vociferously in public that the legislation would boost national security and economic growth.

Rep. Steny Hoyer of Maryland, the No. 2 Democrat, said he expected to bring the measure to the House floor this week, but leaders have held off on scheduling action since it's unclear whether it would have the votes to prevail.

Obama's drive to enact the legislation and congressional Democrats' determination to vote on it before year's end reflect the party's efforts to satisfy Hispanic groups whose backing has been critical in elections and will be again in 2012.

The legislation would give hundreds of thousands of young undocumented immigrants brought to the United States before the age of 16, and who have been here for five years and graduated from high school or gained an equivalency degree, a chance to gain legal status if they joined the military or attended college.

Hispanic activists have described it as the least Congress can do on the issue. It targets the most sympathetic of the millions of undocumented people — those brought to the United States as children, who in many cases consider themselves American, speak English and have no ties to or family living in their native countries.

The measure is "very, very far from amnesty," said Cecilia Muñoz, Obama's director of intergovernmental affairs, citing the numerous hurdles those eligible would have to scale in order to keep their legal status and eventually become citizens.

Estimates differ widely as to how many young people would be eligible for some sort of legal status under the measure. The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that one version of the bill that applies to immigrants aged 35 and under would let more than 1 million apply for legal status over the next 10 years, and potentially allow 500,000 to receive it.

A newer version of the bill changed to improve its chances only applies to those under 30, which supporters say would limit it to 300,000 or so.

GOP opponents in the Senate circulated a memo calling the measure "mass amnesty," noting that the bill has no cap and no end-date. They contend it could allow even the most dangerous criminals and terrorists to gain legal status.

Based on reporting by the Associated Press and EFE.

Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/politi ... z17XrDubg0

Not fast enough for me!