Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said he expects little resistance to a comprehensive immigration reform package during the next session of Congress. Although Reid said it's likely not to happen during President-elect Barack Obama's first 100 days, it probably could happen by spring.
The Federation for American Immigration Reform had Zogby international conduct a post-election poll and the results show that Americans are against an immigration plan that includes amnesty.
During a speech yesterday before a Hispanic caucus at the Democratic National Convention in Denver Michelle Obama, wife of Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, signaled that if elected her husband would attempt to grant amnesty to every illegal alien in the United States.
COMMENTARY: With the president-elect's most recent and most effective appointment - that of no-nonsense Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano to be head of the Department of Homeland Security - we can finally hope that something intelligent will be done on immigration.
Oh, I'm not going to say it's America's "burgeoning immigration problem." I'm not going to write that we are at "point zero" for taking back our out-of- control borders to the south. I'm not going to insist it's way past time for us to act like a grown-up family who obeys the laws and rules in its own household and decides which folks to invite to dinner.
Janet Napolitano may be as familiar a face in Florence, Italy, as she is in Florence, Ariz.
The selection of "Janet, the Italian sheriff" - as the daily La Stampa put it - to become the nation's next Homeland Security secretary sparked interest and excitement in the country from which Napolitano's grandfather emigrated from in the early 1900s.
Italians are fascinated not only by Napolitano's cultural heritage but also by what they view as her innovative strategies as a border-state governor, hence the term "sheriff," said Maurizio Molinari, the Torino-based newspaper's U.S. correspondent.
"The general perception . . . is that she is in the first row facing illegal immigration," a hot-button issue here and there, Molinari said.
"Her decision to work more to prevent the illegal immigration from inside Arizona (is) a strategy that is very similar (to) the one Italy is trying to apply."
Andre F. Radzischewski, Arizona Republic, December 7, 2008
In a town that’s nearly 90 percent white, a Grass Valley City Council candidate still is making illegal immigration a campaign issue. Ed Yarborough this week has hung handmade fliers on doors with the warning “It could happen here.” The word “here” is underlined by hand in red ink.
"San Francisco's immigrant sanctuary policies played a "substantial" role in the slayings of a father and two of his sons by allowing city officials to shield the alleged killer from deportation, despite his violent history, according to a legal claim filed Friday on behalf of the victims' family.
The claim is likely to be followed by a wrongful death lawsuit in which the family of Tony Bologna and his sons could seek millions of dollars from the city.
Bologna, 48, and his sons Michael, 20, and Matthew, 16, were shot to death on a street in the Excelsior district June 22. Edwin Ramos, 21, of El Sobrante, who authorities say is a member of a street gang, has been charged with three counts of murder...."
Jaxon Van Derbeken, San Francisco Chronicle, 23 August 2008
"The scene repeats itself every day on city streets: A driver gets
stuck bumper-to-bumper, blocking the intersection and another car's
ability to complete a left turn.
San Francisco authorities say that was enough to prompt Edwin Ramos to
unload an AK47 assault weapon on a man and his two sons, killing all
three.
The murders immediately sparked public outrage, which only intensified
when authorities revealed that Ramos, 21, is an illegal immigrant who
had managed to avoid deportation despite previous brushes with the
law...."