Most parents will do anything for their children. And when mom and
dad are in the United States illegally, this includes volunteering to
spend the rest of your lives in the shadows if it means your kid can
step into the light.
On a recent trip to Phoenix, I sat down for dinner with a pair of
illegal immigrants -- a married couple who overstayed their visas about
15 years ago and have been trying, with the help of an attorney, to get
right with the law ever since. They’re not the only ones who lack legal
status; they have a child, born in Mexico, who is now a teenager with
an uncertain future. Mom and dad agree that they’d be willing to forgo
their chance at legal status if, at least, something could be done for
their child.
That something is the Development, Relief and Education for Alien
Minors Act, or DREAM, sponsored by Sens. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., and
Richard Lugar, R-Ind. The bill is aimed at young people in the country
illegally, offering them “conditional permanent residency” if they came
before they were 16 and if they attend college or serve in the military.
Once they graduate or complete their enlistment, they would get
permanent legal residency with a chance to apply for U.S. citizenship.
Anyone who didn’t enroll in college or join the military would be
subject to deportation.
As far as my dinner companions are concerned, the legislation is a
gift from above.
“We’d be willing to wait 100 years for the chance to stay here
legally,” the father said, “if our child could have that opportunity
right now through the DREAM Act.”
This bill is a fantastic idea. It identifies young people who want to
make a contribution and separates them from those who don’t. And it
allows the United States to keep precisely the kind of individuals that
other countries would love to have. The legislation represents good
policy and good sense. So, naturally, it’s having trouble making it
through Congress.
Immigration-reform liberals are split. In one camp are those who
think Congress should pass the DREAM Act to solve a small part of the
immigration problem. In the other are those who want to stay focused on
the larger and more elusive cause of comprehensive immigration reform.
Part of it has to do with the numbers. It is estimated that the DREAM
Act could impact as many as 700,000 people; those who are pushing for
comprehensive immigration reform have their eye on changing the status
of more than 10 million.
Some say its time to settle for the DREAM Act as a “down payment” on
immigration reform.
Adding to all this, there’s also drama on Capitol Hill. Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid is in a tough battle for re-election. Should
he lose, it would set off a gladiator match to succeed him between the
second-ranking Democrat (Durbin, who is sponsoring the DREAM Act) and
the third-ranking Democrat (Sen. Charles Schumer of New York, who is
supposedly going to propose -- one of these days -- a comprehensive
bill).
The Hill newspaper reported a few months ago that Durbin is
“soft-pedaling” the DREAM Act so as not to undercut Schumer’s reform
effort. He’s doing this even though his supporters think it’s every
senator for himself now and that No. 2 shouldn’t be doing anything to
help No. 3 -- especially since, many immigration advocates acknowledge,
it’s Durbin’s bill that stands the better chance of passing.
Political junkies love this stuff, but most people couldn’t care less
about the politics holding back the DREAM Act.
They include those parents in Phoenix who just want a safe haven for
their child and thought they had seen the last of this kind of political
dysfunction when they left Mexico.
They also include the several hundred undocumented high school and
college students who recently marched on Washington -- in caps and
gowns -- to rally support for the bill. Some of them occupied senators’
offices and got arrested, risking deportation. By their actions, these
students showed more courage and character in confronting this issue
than our lawmakers have shown in ducking it.
And there’s the best argument for passing the DREAM Act -- so that
deserving young people get the chance to realize their full potential.
With so much of politics driven by the self-interest of politicians,
we’re fresh out of leaders in this country. So we had better start
growing a new crop.