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  1. #1
    Administrator ALIPAC's Avatar
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    Romney Clarifies and Says He Will End Obama's DACA Amnesty program

    Well this is good news. Can someone find us that Boston Globe article. It sure would have been better if Romney had made this clear to the Denver Post in the first place. Sounds like he has seen the pushback out here on the web to the Denver Post news.

    ______

    October 3, 2012, 1:52 pm41 Comments
    Romney’s Immigration Clarification (Re-clarified)

    By LAWRENCE DOWNESFor a moment there I thought Mitt Romney had had a change of heart about deporting young immigrant students who were brought here as children. Don’t I feel stupid.
    People had been wondering for months whether Mr. Romney, as president, would continue President Obama’s policy of temporarily halting deportations for so-called Dreamers, young unauthorized immigrants who would have been eligible for legalization under the long-stalled Dream Act.
    For months Mr. Romney refused to answer the question. Then he told The Denver Post on Monday: “The people who received the special visa that the president has put in place, which is a two-year visa, should expect that the visa would continue to be valid.”

    Setting aside the fact that Mr. Romney apparently confused visas with deferred action, this was big news. It has been hard to pin down any specifics in Mr. Romney’s immigration views, but it had always seemed safe to say that he was not one to support giving illegal immigrants, even young striving students (or “aliens,” as he called them in a Univision forum) a break, since he’d promised to veto the Dream Act and favored a policy of mass “self-deportation.”
    Turns out the major change was no change at all.
    This was in The Boston Globe on Tuesday: “Responding to a Globe request to clarify Romney’s statement to The Denver Post, Romney’s campaign said he would honor deportation exemptions issued by the Obama administration before his inauguration but would not grant new ones after taking office.”

    In other words – Dreamers are out of luck if Mr. Romney wins the White House.





    Romney Says He Won't Grant New Deportation Deferrals - NYTimes.com
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    Mitt Romney Camp Says He Will Not Continue Deferred Action After Taking Office

    Published October 03, 2012

    Fox News Latino

    If elected president, Mitt Romney would not continue the new program that grants work permits and suspends deportation for two years for undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as minors, his campaign says, according to the Boston Globe.

    Romney would not revoke work permits for people who obtain them by the time he would take office, on Jan. 20, but he would not grant any after that, the campaign says, according to the Boston Globe report.

    Critics of Romney’s latest position on the initiative say it will doom the vast majority of the more than 1 million people who could be eligible for it. Since the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, USCIS, began accepting Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals applications on Aug. 15, only 29 people have been granted deferred action and work permits.

    Romney’s plan to discontinue the program – which was announced by the Obama administration in June – clarifies a statement he made in a Denver Post interview in which he was quoted as saying he would not revoke work permits issued under the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, or DACA, plan.

    But his reported comments to the Colorado newspaper left unclear what exactly he planned to do with the program, whether he would keep aspects of it, and for how long. For those who qualify, DACA suspends deportation for two years – it could be renewed once that period expires.

    Romney and others who favor a strict approach to illegal immigration denounced DACA as a stop-gap measure that failed to address problems with the immigration system. Many supporters of strict immigration enforcement assailed it as a form of “amnesty” that rewards lawbreakers.

    But proponents of relief for undocumented immigrants who were brought as minors argue that they should not be punished for the actions of their parents and decisions in which, as children, they had no say. Many of these advocates want passage of the DREAM Act, a measure that would provide such undocumented immigrants a path to legal permanent residence and eventually citizenship.

    The DREAM Act, however, has failed to pass in Congress.

    Romney seemed to suggest to the Denver Post that DACA’s future would not be his focus because “we will have the full immigration reform plan that I’ve proposed.”

    ‘‘The people who have received the special visa that the president has put in place, which is a two-year visa, should expect that the visa would continue to be valid. I’m not going to take something that they’ve purchased,’’ Romney told The Denver Post in an interview published Tuesday. ‘‘Before those visas have expired we will have the full immigration reform plan that I’ve proposed.’’

    DACA actually does not involve a visa and does not grant legal status to those who qualify for the two-year relief from deportation.

    Until the Denver Post interview, Romney had been vague about what he would do with DACA, saying in several interviews that he would put a permanent solution in place, but offering few details about what that would involve.

    “Many observers interpreted the Romney comments to be evidence that the candidate was softening his hardline immigration stance in an attempt to appeal to Latino voters,” said a statement by America’s Voice, a Washington D.C.-based group that promotes more lenient immigration policies.

    “Just when it looked as if Romney was reaching out to Latino voters by promising to protect young people who benefit under President Obama’s initiative,” said Frank Sharry, executive director of America’s Voice, in a statement, “now his campaign is promising to rip away the hopes and futures of more than a million young people who are American in all but paperwork.”

    “Well, at least he finally came clean, and the choice is clearer than ever,” Sharry said. “A vote for Romney is a vote against the DREAMers.”

    The Romney campaign has cast Obama as a failure on immigration, saying that he campaigned on a promise to reform the flawed immigration system, but that he did not fight to deliver on that pledge.

    Obama, in turn, has blamed the lack of comprehensive immigration reform on Republicans, who he said have blocked attempts to address immigration.

    Under the DACA plan, undocumented immigrants will be immune from deportation if they were brought to the United States before they turned 16 and are younger than 30, have been in the country for at least five continuous years, have no criminal history, complete – or are in the process of completing – high school or served in the military. They also can apply for a work permit that will be good for two years with no limits on how many times it can be renewed.

    Romney has said he opposes the DREAM Act, though he says he supports giving some type of conditional legal status to undocumented immigrants brought to the United States as minors who commit to serving in the military.

    Mitt Romney Camp Says He Will Not Continue Deferred Action After Taking Office | Fox News Latino
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    Quote Originally Posted by ALIPAC View Post
    Well this is good news.
    Yes it is.

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    Administrator ALIPAC's Avatar
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    Im glad that all of us illegal immigration hawks proceeded cautiously and did not respond to the media attempts to get us to respond before this clarification.

    They know that they can throw the Romney support base into complete chaos over something like this.

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    MW
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    “Mitt Romney has made it clear: He would not continue the administration’s policy that provides temporary reprieve from deportation for young people who were brought here through no fault of their own,” said Gabriela Domenzain, the Obama campaign’s director of Hispanic press. “This is unacceptable and just another example of how he is the most extreme presidential candidate on immigration in modern history.”

    http://www.boston.com/politicalintel...bSM/story.html

    "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing" ** Edmund Burke**

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  6. #6
    Senior Member ReformUSA2012's Avatar
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    Woohoo. I didn't think Romney had caved on this issue and had a feeling something just wasn't ringing right or taken the wrong way. Glad to hear that he's sticking to his guns so far still.

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