HomeNews UpdateNew immigration bill revives citizenship debate, puts pressure on Biden to deliver

New immigration bill revives citizenship debate, puts pressure on Biden to deliver

Immigrant communities and their advocates are celebrating a change in tone at the White House and a new plan to resolve the legal status of the nation’s 11 million undocumented immigrants.

“Finally, we won’t be afraid anymore,” she said, withholding her last name to protect her identity.

“I feel relief,” said Rosibel Flores Arbaiza, a naturalized American citizen and leader in the large Salvadoran immigrant community in the nation’s capital. “Right now we are, like I say, stand(ing) by, because we don’t know what’s going to happen, but our hope is in the new administration, because that’s what we are looking for — change.”

The U.S. Citizenship Act of 2021 would create an eight-year pathway to citizenship for non-citizen residents, a sweeping immigration overhaul not seen in more than 35 years.

The measure would require undocumented residents to pass criminal background checks, pay taxes and wait five years just to apply for a Green Card, or legal permanent residency.

If they pass additional security checks, learn English and American civics, then qualified immigrants could apply to become citizens three years later, according to the draft legislation.

“The proposal is visionary,” said Marielena Hincapie, executive director of the National Immigration Law Center, a nonpartisan immigrant advocacy group.

“The bill that they’re sending to Congress replaces the word ‘alien’ with ‘noncitizen,'” she added. “That alone is not symbolic, that is actually transformative.”

Some immigrants would be fast-tracked under the Biden proposal, including hundreds of thousands of farm workers, recipients of Temporary Protective Status, or TPS, and so-called Dreamers, young undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. illegally as children.

“I came to the U.S. at a young age with my mom and my dad. They were Southern Baptist preachers in Dallas, Texas, and I’ve been in the American justice movement since I was a senior in high school,” said Greisa Martinez Rosas, a DACA recipient and executive director of United We Dream, a grassroots movement of Dreamers. “I think that this is actually long overdue.”

There are more than a million Dreamers in the U.S. with more than 600,000 enrolled in DACA, or Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, the program created by President Barack Obama to temporarily shield the immigrants from deportation and provide them short-term work permits.

The Dreamers have long received bipartisan support for permanent legal status, but making it permanent is something Congress has been unable to do.

“This is not a political game for us. This is about our lives,” Rosas told ABC News Live. “What is clear from the Obama years, what is even more clear from the Trump years is that the country and the government cannot lead with detention and deportation. There is a mandate and an opportunity for the Biden administration to deliver a visionary future where all of us are able to belong.”

The window of opportunity for legislative action is narrow, with Democrats holding the slimmest majority in Congress in decades and the midterm election less than two years away. Many Republicans are already trying to kill the Biden immigration bill in its tracks.

“At a time when 10 million Americans are still out of work, or struggling to get the hours they need, Joe Biden through his legislation wants to give amnesty to 15 million illegal immigrants,”.

Former Trump Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Mark Morgan warned last month that mass legalization would only encourage illegal immigration in the years ahead.

“We’ve seen it again and again in history, that if you reward the behavior of those coming across illegally, it’s going to keep happening,” he told ABC News Live in December.

 

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