Showing posts with label protests. Show all posts
Showing posts with label protests. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Tomorrow We Vote - Latino Voter Registration

In the spring of 2006 millions took to the streets in cities, large and small, across the nation. Carrying signs proclaiming, "Today We March – Tomorrow We Vote," they voiced their opposition to legislation intended to criminalize 12 million undocumented immigrants, divide families, and foster a climate of fear and intimidation. They demanded instead that meaningful, humane, and responsible, immigration reform be enacted.

Two and a half years later, no such legislation has passed, replaced instead by a toxic and divisive debate that has led to increased raids, illegal detentions, hate crimes, and the very climate of fear and intimidation the marchers took to the streets to oppose. These events have galvanized the Latino community like never before and set the stage for what could be a seismic shift in the American electorate.

Recently released data on voter registration points to the dawn of a new political reality.


Unable to pass new restrictive and punitive legislation, the Right resorted to a mix of increased discriminatory local regulation, increased workplace raids, reinterpretation of federal statutes to allow for civil rights violations, and a media campaign to attempt to legitimize their deportation agenda with the general public. And while they have had some success in riling up their base and redirecting their fears and prejudices towards a fabricated "brown menace" and away from failed economic and foreign policy decisions, the issue has proven to be an electoral non-starter. Campaigns that have relied on restrictionist rhetoric have been utterly unsuccessful..

But now it appears that the dogs of hate unleashed by the anti-immigrant crowd are about to turn around and bite their masters. It’s now becoming evident that they woke a sleeping giant and ignited a flame that has fired up the nation's largest minority like never before. This November, Latinos, and other ethnic groups with large immigrant populations, hold the key to victory in not only the obvious swing states, but a few that some might find surprising.

The passion of the immigration debate has galvanized immigrants and motivated them to apply for citizenship in record numbers. As a result, millions of new voters are preparing to cast their first ballots in November. These new citizens are joining long-time U.S. citizens of Latino background who are newly energized to turn out for the first time in years. Combined with the U.S.-born children and grand-children of immigrants who are coming into voting age, this wave has created a formidable force of Latino voters in 2008. Political scientist and Latino voting expert Matt Barreto of the University of Washington predicts turnout of over 9 million Latino voters in 2008, compared with 7.6 million Latino voters in 2004

Link


The protests of 2006 were the largest in US history and elicited different reactions from various groups. Knuckle draggers on right, like Lou Dobbs and Pat Buchanan, saw the marches as the greatest threat to "White European" hegemony in the history of the republic and went ballistic riling up their base to oppose the "brown menace." Progressives and the rest of the liberal chattering classes sat there, jaws agape, wondering how this ragtag group, seemingly without formal organization, or inside-the-beltway guidance, managed to put millions in the streets while they had had such limited success in mobilizing their own forces for similar efforts in opposition to the war.

Latino, immigrant advocacy, and civil/human rights organizers saw something different. They saw the birth of a movement. A movement Washington insiders played little, if any, roll in organizing – a true grassroots effort, born of the streets. Organizers across the spectrum, from well established DC advocacy groups to local community organizations to grassroots groups that sprung up in the wake of the marches, all saw the potential of this new movement and quickly started to mobilize.....particularly in the areas of naturalization of new immigrants and voter registration. And they are now about to reap the rewards of those efforts.

In 2008 alone, over 900,000 new naturalization petitions were approved. Of those, the vast majority plan on voting.

The We Are America Alliance (WAAA) expects significant Latino turnout for Election Day 2008. ...(and) is in the process of registering 500,000 new citizen voters and mobilizing one million to cast ballots on Election Day. WAAA is focusing its efforts on thirteen states with a high number of immigrant and Latino citizens, aided by last year’s surge in naturalization applications. Link



WAAA's numbers are impressive:

  • Over 83,000 new voters in Florida

  • 70,000 in California

  • 35,000 in Pennsylvania

  • 25,000 in Texas

  • 25,000 Illinois

  • 18,000 in Arizona

  • 17,000 in New York

  • 35,000 in Colorado

  • 52,000 In Nevada (almost 2.5 times the amount that state was decided by in the 2004 presidential election - George W. Bush won Nevada by 21,500 votes).

  • 40,000 in New Mexico (George W. Bush won by 6,000 votes in 20040


And these numbers reflect the efforts of only one group focusing mostly on new immigrants. Others, such as Voto Latino are concentrating on the broader Latino community and Latino youth vote. And then there are the efforts of the various campaigns and political parties to register Latino voters.

Yesterday, Democracia USA, one member of the We Are America Alliance, announced the final tallies of it's registration efforts in 7 States.

Democracia U.S.A. (D-USA), a national non-partisan Hispanic voter registration and civic engagement organization, today released its final Hispanic voter registration figures for 2008, which enumerate the organization’s efforts over the past year and shows an average 7.6% increase in voter registration in the seven states where it operates, totaling a one percent increase in the entire Hispanic electorate. D-USA operations in Arizona, Florida, Nevada, New Jersey and Pennsylvania reported the following increases in registrations:

Arizona 2%
Florida 6%
Nevada 11%
New Jersey 6%
Pennsylvania 10%

These increases demonstrate an overall trend across the country of emerging political activism and interest among Hispanics as their numbers increase state-by-state.

In Florida, the Hispanic voting population in the Orlando media market quadrupled between 1990 - 2008 from 66,000 to 234,000 and Central Florida Hispanics show an acute tendency to vote for the candidate not the party, making it the most swing prone voting bloc in the nation. The percentage of Miami Dade’s overall Hispanic electorate grew from 44% in 2000 to 50% in 2008, while the percentage of native-born Cubans within this group fell from 75% in 2000 to 58% in 2008.

In Pennsylvania, a D-USA Hispanic voter trend study noted an increase of 84,000 Hispanics registering to vote between 2006 and 2008 with a statewide Hispanic electorate total of 294,000. Democracia USA’s three regional offices in Philadelphia, Reading and Pennsauken, NJ. registered over 50,000 new voters in Pennsylvania and Southern New Jersey in that same timeframe.

Finally, since 2000, Hispanic voters in Nevada have more than doubled, now making them 11% of the state’s total electorate.

Link


According to Jorge Mursuli, President and CEO of Democracia U.S.A., new registrants in Florida have been trending decidedly Democratic. In 2004, 47% of registrants listed themselves as Independents, with the remainder splitting relatively evenly between Democrats and Republicans. In 2008, 58% of new registrants are registering as Democrats, with Republicans garnering numbers in the low 20% range.

We won't know the full effects of all these efforts until after the election, but it's become quite obvious to most following these trends that the Republican Right and their media lapdogs have overplayed their hand, underestimating the blowback their anti-immigrant/anti-Latino rhetoric would cause.

A recent poll from NDN, conducted by Bendixen & Associates, asked Latinos, “How important is the immigration issue to you and your family?” In Florida, 79% of Latinos viewed immigration as important (51% “very important”); in Colorado, 74% viewed immigration as important (42% “very important”); in New Mexico, 80% viewed immigration as important (43% “very important”); and in Nevada, 86% viewed the issue as important (58% “very important”).

... In 2004, George W. Bush won approximately 40% of the Latino vote nationwide, but polls today show weaker support for the Republican Party among this demographic. The Pew Hispanic Center recently found that Latinos favor Senator Obama over Senator McCain 66% to 23%.x In their research, 76% of Latino registered voters rated Senator Obama favorably, in comparison to a 44% favorability rating for Senator McCain.i Obama leads among Latinos in the Gallup daily tracking poll by an average of 59% to 30% over the past month. And a Wall Street Journal poll shows Latino voters favoring Obama over McCain 63% to 30%, while the poll shows the candidates tied with the general electorate.

These numbers are repeated in the hotly-contested “battleground” states. In Colorado, Senator Obama leads McCain among Latinos 56% to 26%; in Nevada, 62% to 20%; and in New Mexico, 56% to 23% according to the NDN poll. In Florida, a state where George W. Bush won a majority of Latino support in 2004, Latino voters’ preference is now evenly divided between the two candidates. And a new NALEO Educational Fund survey shows Latino voters who have made up their minds favoring Obama 63% to 15% in Colorado; 55% to 14% in Nevada; and 61% to 20% in New Mexico, with the candidates in a near statistical tie in Florida. Link


Obama's strong showing among Latino voters follows a general trend where Democrats are viewed as more concerned about issues that effect Latinos ... and particularly the hot button topic of immigration.

When asked “which party has done a better job on immigration” by NDN/Bendixen, Latino voters favored generic Democrats by the following margins: in Florida, 48% to 29%; Colorado, 48% to 14%; New Mexico, 46% to 19%; and Nevada, 58% to 20%.

The NALEO Educational Fund poll finds that nearly two-thirds of Latino voters in Colorado, New Mexico, and Nevada believe the Democratic Party has the most concern for the Latino community, while only 6%, 4%, and 7% respectively chose the Republican Party. In Florida, 40% of Latino voters say the Democratic Party has more concern for the Latino community, while 20% choose the Republican Party and one-third say there is no difference. And a Pew Hispanic Center survey found that 49% of Latinos “say that the Democratic Party has more concern for Hispanics, while just 7% say the Republican Party has more concern. Since 2004, the share of Hispanics who say that the Democratic Party has more concern for Hispanics has increased by 14 percentage points.”

Link


For many Latinos, their concern about immigration has just as much to do with the tone of the debate as policy specifics. Polling shows that Latinos favor a comprehensive approach immigration reform at about the same rates as the general population. But as Cecilia Muñoz, Senior Vice President at the National Council of La Raza recently said, immigration “tends to determine who the good guys are and the bad guys are for Latinos.”

This is perhaps most evident in one of the most conservative groups within the Latino community; Evangelicals ... a group that according to the Pew Hispanic Center accounted almost entirely for Bush's increased share of the overall Latino vote in 2004, which grew from 35% in 2000 to 40% in 2004.

Evangelicals are one of the fastest growing segments of the Latino community. In 2004, they represented about one-third of the Hispanic electorate (up from one-quarter in 2000), and 63 percent voted for Bush—the first time on record that a Republican presidential candidate won the Latino evangelical vote.

Latino evangelicals are a distinctive demographic. They tend to be more affluent, more educated and more acculturated than other Hispanics. They're also more likely to be citizens and more likely to vote. "They punch above their weight when it comes to electoral impact," says Luis Lugo of the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life. Politically, they tend to be highly conservative on social issues like abortion and gay marriage—in fact, more conservative than white evangelicals, according to various studies—but liberal on economic matters, such as publicly funded health care

... This year, the trend lines are disconcerting for Republicans. Bush was an appealing figure to Hispanic evangelicals—full of religious ardor, devoted to a conservative "life" agenda and appreciative of Latino culture. Yet many of them have soured on him as a result of the economic crisis and the war in Iraq. Moreover, GOP stridency on illegal immigration has made the party appear anti-Hispanic. The platform Republicans adopted at their convention didn't help. It called for declaring "English as the official language in our nation," and with regard to immigration, it emphasized border security and rejected "en masse legalizations." (Rev. Samuel) Rodriguez uses adjectives like "xenophobic," "nativist" and "anti-immigrant" to describe it. McCain has struggled in this environment. Though he championed immigration reform for years, he dialed back his support during the primaries.

Link


Today, a coalition of leading Latino Evangelical organizations released a report looking at polling trends among Latino Protestants, 80 percent of whom self-identify as born-again and/or attended an Evangelical denomination.

"The Biblical mandate to welcome the immigrant could not be clearer and we draw our values from our Bibles," said Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, President of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, who spoke during the press conference announcing the survey results. "This poll powerfully demonstrates that immigration is a profoundly religious issue for Hispanic evangelicals. We will vote our faith and we will vote our values. It's time that all candidates take notice."

"Latino Protestant voters are demonstrating a faith-based politics that puts moral solutions above ideology and sound bites," added Katie Paris, Director of Communications Strategy at Faith in Public Life, a sponsor of the poll. "Consequently, they are commanding the attention of both parties and defying the outdated stereotype that people of faith are mired in partisanship," she concluded.


  • Latino Protestant registered voters favor Democrat Barack Obama over Republican John McCain by a 17-point margin (50.4 percent to 33.6 percent with 10.4 percent still undecided). This margin of support for Obama is slightly lower than his lead among the Latino population overall.

    This is a dramatic shift from 2004 when George W. Bush soundly won the Latino Protestant vote. According
    to 2004 post-election survey data, Bush won 63 percent of these voters, up from 32 percent in 2000


  • 76.8 percent say their religious beliefs are important in influencing their views on immigration (54.6 percent say very important). Only 19 percent say their religious beliefs are not important in influencing their views on the issue.


Like all other voters, Latinos are most concerned about the economy, healthcare, education and Iraq. But the underlying specter of the xenophobia and racism that marked the immigration debate has led them to more readily question if they have any future in the Republican party.

Back in 2005, when there was still talk of "the permanent Republican majority" and Jim Sensenbrenner and his colleagues in the House Immigration Reform Caucus were pushing through Tom Tancredo's deportation bill, HR4437, one must wonder if they had any idea what waking the sleeping giant would really mean to their party's future.




More info on the Latino vote, and registration efforts in various swing states:
FL
NM
CO
PA
FL
CO

Read More...

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Burma?, Pakistan? ... no, Calexico Calif.

On Sunday, participants in a week-long protest against further militarization of the southern border and further construction of the border wall came under attack from US Border Patrol officers at the Calexico/Mexicali port of entry. The protest, which took place on both sides of the border simultaneously, appeared to have been proceeding peacefully until a symbolic "cross-border kissing booth", which involved making a hole in the border fence approximately four inches in diameter, was installed along the barrier. With that, approximately 100 Border Patrol officers descended upon the 30 demonstrators of "No Borders Camp" with pepper gas pellets, tazers, and batons. In the ensuing melee, three were arrested; many more were injured or suffered from the effects pepper gas.

One witness said, "I think that people should really understand that the border is a totally militarized zone and that this isn't your normal police repression at a demonstration. This is an occupation force … And that is the real context of what happened today, rather than simple policing"

As people attempted to disperse, the border patrol chased and detained groups of them, forcing them to their knees with their hands on their heads. In one case, a person badly injured by pepper pellets shot at close range was pursued away from the conflict, pulled away from a companion wanting to treat his wounds, surrounded and beaten in the head with batons by up to 15 border patrol agents
IndyMedia

The video tells the whole story. It doesn't look all that dissimilar from what we've seen coming out of police states like Burma or Pakistan recently.



More than 500 people participated in the No Borders Camp during the week of November 7-11. The bi-national camp out was billed as a networking forum for activists opposed to the militarization of the border. Previous No Borders Camps have taken place in Europe and Australia.

Activities during the camp included a rally and march on November 9 at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility in El Centro, CA and a memorial service on November 10 at a cemetery in Holtville, CA where the remains of migrants who've died crossing the border are buried. All activities during the camp were peaceful and intended to build connections across borders. Sunday's march was meant to culminate the border camp.

The following interview with an eyewitness gives a detailed account of the confrontation:

Q: This is a quick report back from what happened at the border, go ahead and give us your version of what happened, what you saw.

A: The cops really didn't like the bi-national kissing booth, thats for sure. The holes that were put in the wall to set up the kissing booth were in my view the instigation of the actual initial push to separate us from the wall.

The cops formed a line on the Calexico side which separated us from that wall. At that point there was a quick rally and a lot more border patrol showed up.

Two things happened:
One, an officer claimed that he was pushed or in some way "assaulted." I didn't see what happened.
And bottles started to come over the wall from the Mexicali side.

But pretty suddenly and a pretty unprovoked attack followed from there in which a lot of border patrol made a huge push forward to push us out of the entire square.

People who fell down were mostly hit; some were beaten quite badly.

A group of us were surrounded on one side and detained, told to sit down and put our hands on our heads.
We were detained for a brief period of time and eventually released in fives.

That's pretty much what happened.

Q: When did you hear the order to disperse? When did they give that order?

A: There was never any order to disperse. It was totally a surprise when the attack came.

Q: How many people did you see were arrested, did you see anybody get arrested?

A: I saw three people who looked like they were being taken into custody and those people seemed to me to be the ones that had fallen down.

Q: You were saying earlier before we started the recording that you saw one person who was pushed over when the line came in and they were just beaten. I hate to ask you but can you kind of describe that scene?

A: One of the people on the Calexico side was pushed over and he was on the ground, he was covering his head,as he tried to stand up, the border patrol kept hitting him in the knees with batons, repeatedly in the knees. I saw one blow to the face. He looked completely passive, he was not resisting and he has been taken into custody.

Q: Anything else you can recall from that, did you have any chance to interact with the border patrol officers,
was there any communication between the people there and them?

A: The communication was extremely limited. There was a real unwillingness on the part of the border patrol to work with our legal observers. it was actually quite a while before our legal observers were given the time of day.

It was quite a while before our legal observers were given the time of day. Basically the orders seemed to be coming from this one officer who claimed he was pushed or "assaulted." I don't believe that at all, i think it was a totally premeditated attack, but that's just me.

Q: How does this compare to other things you have experienced, how does this compare to your past experience?

A: The thing about the border patrol, we were in a zone that is completely militarized. The border patrol are not cops, they are essentially a military, and an occupation force, so they don't actually even really know or understand protocols for police interactions with mass movements.

There was actually an extreme ignorance on the part of the border patrol for even basic issues of protocol for how to deal with the situation and a lot of the border patrol were acting like this was their first time. They didn't form straight lines when they lined up, when they started pushing they didn't push in a straight lineup, they just went into the crowd fists swinging. It was very undisciplined and it was very emotional and then when we were all sitting down they would yell things at us and talk to us in the most bizarre way.

Q: As an example?
A: As an example, one of the border patrol came over to one of the groups and started saying like how something about how we were... The border patrol agent was basically just trying to explain to us how what we were doing was wrong. That was just a really strange thing for a cop to do. We were all on our knees with our hands behind our heads. Now he is going to come over to us and lecture us about our politics, which he doesn't even understand, and he did it in a very bizarre way which I can't even recall right now.

Q: I recall that the border patrol had some sort of special training session right before this. Maybe that was to make them have some sort of policing skills.

A: I think it was probably more how to learn how to use the paint ball pepper spray pellet guns the people who were armed with those did seem they did have training in how to use them, the paint ball pepper spray pellets normally should hit the ground so that the gas would rise. It seemed that they were trained in crowd dispersal techniques with that particular weapon.

Q: But in one case we've seen photos on the website now with at least one person was shot several times in the body?

A: Yeah, three or four times to the chest that is another bizarre exception to the kinds of things we've been seeing.

Q: Do you think it would be fair to say that they might have been itching for a chance to actually do some damage after the actual camp which was more or less peaceful?

A: I think the officer in charge [Mario Lacuesta], absolutely, this is really what I think that was about. Because the officer in charge, he was the last officer to come in on the shift change and when he came in for the shift change at the no borders camp, he immediately started causing problems at the camp, he immediately reversed decisions that previous officers had made in terms of camp protocol, and was really provocatory even during the No Borders Camp itself.

And then for him to come at us and to try to say that he was attacked it was definitely like he was trying to affirm relationship that he had established and initiated in the No Borders Camp.

If he's right, if he wasn't lying, if he really was the instigator of this total violent act of oppression, then this is totally continuous. Yeah, it's payback.

Q: Is there anything else that you think is important?

A: I think that people should really understand that the border is a totally militarized zone and that this isn't your normal police repression at a demonstration.

This is an occupation force protecting its institutional apparatus of occupation. And that is the real context of what happened today, rather than simple policing tactics.

Courtesy of IndyMedia

This is not the first time that law enforcement personnel have overstepped their authority while dealing with demonstrators protesting aspects of US immigration policy. This past May, during a national day of protest for immigrants rights, police in riot gear, armed with batons and guns loaded with no-lethal ammunition entered LA's MacArthur Park and began firing upon the crowd.

When seeing video like the one shot at Calexico, it only confirms just how much our current leadership has in common with the dictatorial police states they support around the world.

Read More...

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

Riot police use rubber bullets to disperse immigrant marchers

National Immigrant Solidarity Network and Action LA, organizers of the immigrant-rights marches that took place in Los Angeles and various other cities throughout the country, are calling for a full investigation into an incident that occurred in LA's MacArthur Park that marred the day of peaceful protest.

Shortly after 6PM, police in riot gear, armed with batons and guns loaded with no-lethal ammunition entered the park and began firing upon the crowd assembled there in attempts disperse it.

There have been conflicting reports as to what sparked the violence, but numerous news agencies were present at the time and documented the action.

CNN has been showing live video shot from MacArthur Park of riot police using batons and rubber bullets to disperse the large crowd of immigrants-rights marchers. Quite a few very old and young people can bee seen in the fleeing crowd.

The reporters seem to be just as confused as the marchers as to what exactly was going on. One young man was interviewed and revealed a large baseball-sized welt on his stomach where he was hit by one of the rubber bullets.


There are conflicting reports as to what sparked the violence.

LAPD Chief William Bratton in a TV interview claimed "15 officers were hit by missiles that were thrown at them by 'certain elements of the crowd ... who we don't believe were representative' of most of those who were there...While he spoke, a person could be heard declaring, 'That's not true.'"

The LA Times seems to corroborate Bratton's account.

Around 6 p.m., after police tried to disperse a group of demonstrators who had moved off the sidewalk into Alvarado Street, some of the few thousand participants still in the park started throwing plastic bottles and rocks at officers. Then, several dozen riot police, clad in helmets and carrying batons, started clearing the park, firing a few dozen volleys of foam bullets into the crowd.

Several people -- including 15 police officers -- were hurt, but most, if not all, of the injuries appeared to be minor. However, late Tuesday, a staff member from Telemundo's newsroom confirmed that one reporter and three camera operators from the Spanish language TV station had been injured and were taken to a hospital by police. There was also a report that a Fox 11 reporter and camera operator had been injured.

A helicopter flew low over the east side of the park about 6:30 p.m. and sirens blasted as police ordered people out of the park, telling them they would be arrested if they didn't move out.

The police formed a riot line across the park on the east side, forcing the crowd to move west in a big mass. Some of the participants were yelling at police, "You can't do this."

About 6:45 p.m., police ordered the last people out of MacArthur Park, mostly news personnel and some marchers filming the police actions, declaring an "unlawful assembly."

One of those at the scene, Hamid Khan, executive director of the South Asian Network, termed the police action "absolutely an atrocity" and said officers "overreacted." The police action had cut short several speeches, he said, as people left when the confrontation began.

Another confrontation cane around 6:50 p.m., still well before nightfall, when a police car blazing its lights was bombarded by bottles and clothes as it passed. A line of officers fired several volleys of the 37-millimeter to 40-millimeter "less-lethal munitions" -- police parlance for foam or rubber bullets -- from wide-barreled launchers resembling shotguns. People started running, while also throwing things -- from plastic bottles to palm fronds -- at Metro buses. One took a piece of wood and hit a bus.

More police cars streamed north on Rampart and west on Sixth. In Lafayette Park, several police jumped out with batons and tackled some in the crowd, arresting someone in the big pile. They chased reporters away.

LA Times


But there have been other reports that mention different factors, stating that an incident between a motorcycle officer and protesters sparked the police response.

LOS ANGELES, May 1 (UPI) -- A day of peaceful immigration rallies in major U.S. cities Tuesday was marred when Los Angeles police fired rubber bullets to disperse the crowd.
Witnesses said police wearing riot gear and wielding batons gave no warning before firing at rally participants gathered at MacArthur Park, CNN reported. Police said a protester knocked down a motorcycle officer, the news channel said.
UPI


But whatever the cause, the video of the incident clearly shows what appears to be an excessive use of force by the officers.(click to veiw)



National Immigrant Solidarity Network, ActionLA Coalition
Statement on LAPD Brutally Attacks May Day Immigrant Marchers at McArthur Park

Lee Siu Hin
National Coordinator
National Immigrant Solidarity Network
Action LA Coalition

May 1, 2007 10:00 PM PST

National Immigrant Solidarity Network and Action LA is outraged to learn that at about 6:30 PM, May 1, the LAPD fired rubber bullets and tear gas into crowds of hundreds of people at the May Day rally in McArthur Park. This was after the police had declared an unlawful assembly. Most of the people present did not hear or know about the police declaration..

The LAPD failed to act professionally and demonstrate restraint when it used excess force against a peaceful rally of families which included mothers, babies and young children. The LAPD lacked recognition of the consequences of it's actions.

Shame on the LAPD for failing to careful think before using brutal force to attack peaceful marchers.

We are calling community members, civil leaders to Immediately call LAPD chief William Bratton, and LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa office, to demand the following:

1) An immediate independent police investigation of the May Day incident at McArthur Park, and demand officers who violated the police guidelines be punished.

2) The immediate and full disclosure from LAPD of any people arrested and detained, we further demand that the LAPD not act as immigrant agents to enforce Federal immigrant law. Due-process of any detainees must be respected.

We encourage anyone if you have information about the May Day McArthur Park incident, please contact us: (213)403-0131 or e-mail: info@immigrantsolidarity.org

We'll issue another detail statement soon and your support is highly appreciated.

Lee Siu Hin
National Coordinator
National Immigrant Solidarity Network
ActionLA Coalition

LAPD Hotline:
Toll Free (1-877-275-5273)
Spanish Line (Español)
213-928-8222

LA Mayor's Office:
213/978-0600

Link



Additional video available Here
and here

Pictures available here:
http://www.nbc4.tv/slideshow/news/13238953/detail.html

http://www.nbcsandiego.com/slideshow/news/13238996/detail.html

alternet link

tags: , , , , ,

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Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Dobbs misrepresents immigrant protest demands

It's starting to appear that a day doesn't pass in which CNN anchor, and resident immigration "expert", Lou Dobbs doesn’t blatantly misrepresent, or misconstrue, some fact, statistic or opinion about his signature issue. With today's immigration-rights protests throughout the country, it was expected that he would devote a large portion of his nightly show to the topic.

With correspondents stationed throughout the country to report into Dobbs, the anchor played his usual role as ringmaster in the circus of the absurd.

Tonight, one of Dobbs' chief aims appeared to be to inform his audience about the demands of the "pro-illegal alien lobby" who were taking to the streets.

The only problem ….in what has become a usual practice on Dobbs' nightly show, he repeatedly misrepresented those demands to fit his own personal agenda.

The very first interview of the night by Dobbs's crack correspondent, Christine Romans, started the tone for the rest of the evening.

Romans, reporting from Phoenix, stated that the protester's message today was "consistent and careful" – they want amnesty for the people who are already here illegally, and they want an expanded guest worker program."

The "amnesty and guest worker" theme then proceeded throughout the night with both Dobbs and various correspondents repeating it. This in spite of the fact the march organizers clearly stated not only in statements and manifestos, but in flyers and posters that they were protesting AGAINST GUEST WORKER PROGRAMS.

But since guest worker programs are the glue that bind the "Broken Borders" crowd with the "Exporting American" and ""War on the Middle Class" adherents, Dobbs was not about to tell his loyal viewers that those "Illegal Mexicans" and their "Open Borders Allies" were actually taking to the streets to denounce the programs.

So instead, Dobbs created an alternative reality and presented it as fact:



CHRISTINE ROMANS, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Lou, the Phoenix Police Department is officially estimating how many people were here today, 15,000 to 20,000. It is quiet here now, but the message was consistent and careful. They want amnesty for the people who are already here illegally, and they want an expanded guest worker program for those who want to come here to work -- Lou.

DOBBS: Christine, the idea that they not only want a guest worker program, but they want amnesty, is there anything else being sought here?


But the organizers of the May 1st protests said this about their goals in their official announcement of the marches.

On May Day 2007, National Immigrant Solidarity Network is calling for a multi-ethnic, decentralized, multi-topic and multi-tactic national day of mobilization to support immigrant workers rights.

National Immigrant Solidarity Network

Our ten points of unity (based on our Jan 29, 2007 open letter to the Congress):

1) No to anti-immigrant legislation, and the criminalization of the immigrant communities.

2) No to militarization of the border.

3) No to the immigrant detention and deportation.

4) No to the guest worker program.

5) No to employer sanction and "no match" letters.

6) Yes to a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.

7) Yes to speedy family reunification.

8) Yes to civil rights and humane immigration law.

9) Yes to labor rights and living wages for all workers.

10) Yes to the education and LGBT immigrant legislation.

DOBBS: Thousands of demonstrators, far fewer than last year, took to the streets across the nation, demanding amnesty and a path to citizenship for illegal aliens.... Supporters and advocates calling for amnesty, guest worker programs, an end to immigration raids, and an end to deportations.

Protest leader, Nativo Lopez, had this to say about guest worker programs recently.
The Mexican American Political Association and Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana

PRESS STATEMENT

Monday, March 26, 2007
For Immediate Release
Contact: Nativo V. Lopez

…a massive new temporary guest-worker program (“new worker visa”) will only undermine the prevailing wage and the social situation of U.S. workers; current practice demonstrates that such contract workers are not protected under federal and state statues; the labor certification process established in current law would be weakened under this program;

“If this is the starting point in the legislative process of negotiating and haggling for a ‘comprehensive’ immigration bill this year, it bodes very poorly for the immigrant communities of America,” ended Lopez. “You don’t need to be a weatherman to see this tsunami of injustice coming down on our heads.” “We expected much better from Congressman Luis Gutierrez, and we feel let down.

“We absolutely are not for accepting just anything as a way to turn to our constituency and declare some vague victory on immigration reform. This would be a major sell-out to the legitimate and reasonable aspirations of our community.”

Nativo V. Lopez is currently the National Director of Hermandad Mexicana Latinoamericana (HML) and the National President of the Mexican American Political Association (MAPA).

Link

DOBBS: Also surprising to me, Casey, and I'd like your thought on this, last year there was a considerable backlash. I think most of the organizers of those marches last year would agree with this. It was not helpful to the cause of illegal aliens or their cries for amnesty or open borders.

This year, it seems like even though there are far fewer numbers, there's a greater revelation of the agenda here. Talking about not only amnesty, but expanding guest worker programs, now also wanting no deportations, and stopping raids on the employers of illegal aliens.

The agenda seems to be broadening, and rather substantially.


Protest leaders had this to say about guest workers and the marches earlier last month.
Upcoming Actions

4/18 - 4/20: National Call-In Days To Oppose the President Bush's Immigrant Proposal/STRIVE Act

We are organizing White House and Congressional call-in days (Wednesday, April 18 - Friday, April 20) to express your concern about their proposed immigrant legislative bills to the President Bush and the STRIVE co-sponsors Representatives Luis Gutierrez (D-IL) and Jeff Flake (R-AZ):

White House Comment Line: (202)456-1111

Representatives Luis Gutierrez: (202)225-8203 (Washington D.C.)

Representatives Jeff Flake: (202)225-2635 (Washington D.C.)

And tell them about the following statement:

"We would like express our concern about your recent immigration proposals that require undocumented immigrants to pay large fines, excess background checks, and to leave the country in order to apply legal immigratnt status is unacceptable.

We also cannot accept the militarization of the U.S-Mexico border and building a new border fence.

We want to support the immigration bill that includes the following propose by National Immigrant Solidarity Network:

1) No to anti-immigrant legislation, and the criminalization of the immigrant communities.
2) No to militarization of the border.
3) No to the immigrant detention and deportation.
4) No to the guest worker program.
5) No to employer sanction and "no match" letters.
6) Yes to a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants.
7) Yes to speedy family reunification.
8) Yes to civil rights and humane immigration law.
9) Yes to labor rights and living wages for all workers.
10) Yes to the education and LGBT immigrant legislation.

MayDay2007.org

DOBBS: You just heard one fellow in Lisa's report saying not only should there be amnesty, it should be general amnesty, it should be general amnesty and now there should be no conditions on it whatsoever. We've heard reports around the country. Now it is not just amnesty, it is also an enlarged guest worker program.

Throughout the course of the show Dobbs continually hammered away on the "illegal aliens" call for expanded guest worker programs theme. With each recounting of the theme, Dobbs became more and more flabbergasted by the "audacity" of the protesters.

Dobbs concluded one segment by saying, "We're just a world without borders. I mean this agenda is expanding, isn't it?" ….

Well no not really Mr Dobbs, despite all your attempts to make your viewers believe to the contrary.

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Monday, April 30, 2007

Locations of May 1st Immigration Rallies

What follows is list of events scheduled for the Great American Boycott II, May 1st 2007. It has been compiled from various sources and organizations sponsoring events. It may not be complete as new events are being added continuously. I will try to keep it as current as possible over the next 24 hours


UDATE:
See comments for additional locations



Mexico


Tijuana
Tuesday, May
1
5:00 pm
- Rally/March - Las Brisas Shopping Center, Blvd. Diaz Ordaz

Workers Information Center, Cittac
011-52-664-622-4269 • maquilatijuanasandiego@earthlink.net



Arizona


Tucson
Tuesday, May
1
8:00 am
- Gather SouthGate 3300 S. 6th Ave (6th Ave & 44th St)
9:00 am - March to Downtown Tucson
12:00 pm - Rally at Armory Park 220 S 5th Ave

Tucson May 1st Coalition
PO Box 1286
Tucson AZ 85702

520-770-1373 • may1@iactucson.org mayday2007.iactucson.org
Download flyers in Español and English

Tucson, AZ: March and Rally for Immigrant and Worker Rights!
March
Arizonia
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
08:00 AM-02:00 PM


California


Davis
Tuesday, May 1
UC Davis Campus, Memorial Union Patio
11-12:00 - Rally at MU patio with musicians and performers
11:30 am - Solidarity Walk Out. Congregate at MU patio
12:00 pm - March

Davis Students Against War Resource
dsawresource@gmail.com
http://daviswiki.org/UCD_May_1%2C_2007:_Day_of_Action

Los Angeles
Tuesday, May
1
12:00 pm
- March at the beginning of Olympic & Broadway

National May 1st Movement for Worker & Immigrant Rights
5274 West Pico Blvd. #203
Los Angeles CA 90019

323.702.6397
Download flyers in Español and English

Modesto
Tuesday, May
1
10:00 am
- Rally - Corner of Crows Landing & Hatch Rds.

www.modestobrownberets.com/cms
contact@modestobrownberets.com
www.aztlanrising.com
contact@aztlanrising.com
Download flyers in Español/English

Romoland
Tuesday, May 1
5-8:30 pm - corner of 2nd St. and Highway 74

m_rose_d@hotmail.com

San Diego
Tuesday, May
1
3:00pm
- March/Rally - Corner of Park and A

Si Se Puede Coalition
619-309-7435 • davidschmidt2003@hotmail.com

San Francisco
Tuesday, May
1
12:00 pm
- Dolores Park in the Mission District
1:00 pm - Grand March for Unconditional Amnesty to the Civic Center

Movimiento Por Una Amnistia Incondicional/Movement for an Unconditional Amnesty
415.287.0749
AmnistiaSF@gmail.com

San Francisco
Tuesday, May 1
7-9:00 pm - Mission & 24th Streets - Candlelight Vigil for Unconditional & General Amnesty

Barrio Unido

Oakland, CA: May Day 2007 March
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
10:00 AM-01:00 PM

Modesto, CA: MayDay 2007
Protest
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
10:00 AM-10:00 PM

Sacramento, CA: May Day Mobilization
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
10:00 AM-06:00 PM

Stockton, CA: May Day March
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
10:00 AM-06:00 PM

Santa Rosa, CA: May Day March
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
11:00 AM-02:00 PM

San Diego-Tijuana: May Day Mobilization And teach-In
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
11:00 AM-06:00 PM

UCSD, San Diego, CA: Student Walkout May 1
Protest
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
11:30 AM-01:30 PM

San Francisco, CA: May Day Mobilization
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-04:00 PM

San Francisco, CA: May Day walkout for students
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-12:00 PM

Los Angeles, CA: May Day 2007 March and Rally!
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-03:00 PM

Los Angeles, CA: May Day MIOWN Immigrant March
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
02:00 PM-05:00 PM

Romoland, CA: El Pueblo Unido- Rally in Support of Immigrant Rights
Protest
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
05:00 PM-09:00 PM

CHICO,CA Immigrant Rights March And Rally
March
California
Immigrant Rights
03:00 PM-10:00 PM

Salinas, CA: II Gran Boicot Americano por una Amnistia
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
03:00 PM-08:00 PM

Santa Ana, CA: May Day March
March
California
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
03:00 PM-06:00 PM




Colorado


Denver
Tuesday, May
1
10:00 am
- Lincoln Park

Denver, CO: May Day 2007 March
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
10:00 AM-01:00 PM

Colorado Immigrant Rights Coalition (CIRC)
1212 Mariposa St; Suite 5
Denver, CO 80204
303.893.3500 • julien@coloradoimmigrant.org www.coloradoimmigrant.org


Conn.


New Haven, CT: Recuperando el 1ro. de Mayo
Other
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-07:00 PM


Florida


May Day: Florida March/Rally
March
Florida
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
09:00 AM-06:00 PM

The Florida Alliance Pro-Legalization and Immigration Reform
March
Florida
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
02:00 PM-08:00 PM


Illinois


Chicago
Tuesday, May
1
10:00 AM
– Plantón/Rally – Union Park [Ashland Ave. and Washington St.]
12:00 PM – Marcha/March – Randolph St., Desplaines St., Jackson Blvd., Columbus Dr.
2:00 PM – Plantón/Rally – Grant Park [Balbo Dr. and Columbus Dr.]

March 10th Movement
1638 S. Blue Island Ave
Chicago, IL 60608

877.762.7242
Info@movimiento10demarzo.org

Chicago May Day March (II)--LEGALIZATION AND FULL RIGHTS!
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
10:00 AM-02:00 PM

May 1 Chicago, IL: Students & Workers Walk-Out
Protest
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-06:00 PM


Indiana


Indianapolis, IN: Justice for Immigrants
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
05:00 PM-09:00 PM


Kansas


Topeka, KS: May Day 2007 Immigration Rally
Other
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
06:00 PM-07:00 PM


Kentucky


Louisville
Tuesday May 1

5-7:00 pm - Rally/March - Gene Snyder Courthouse to Jefferson Park

The Kentucky May Day Coalition
859-685-0387
www.kccir.org
Download flyers in Español and English


Massachusetts


Boston
Tuesday May 1

4:00 pm - Rally/March - Boston Common

Boston May Day Coalition
617.290.5614 • info@bostonmayday.org
www.bostonmayday.org

Chelsea
Tuesday May 1

2:00 pm - March from Everett City Hall
3:00 pm - March from Chelsea City Hall
4:00 pm - Rally in Central Square, East Boston

Chelsea Collaborative
300 Broadway
Chelsea, MA 02150
617.889.6080 • mail@chelseacollab.org
www.chelseacollab.org
Download flyers in Español/English

pioneer valley - western massachusetts May Day events
March
U.S.
Immigrant Rights
12:00 PM-12:00 AM

East Boston, MA - May Day March
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
02:00 PM-05:00 PM

Boston May Day
Protest
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
04:00 PM-07:00 PM


Michigan


Detroit
Tuesday May 1 - Time/Place - TBD

Latinos Unidos/United de Michigan (LUUM)
Rosendo Delgado - 313.887.1849
Ignacio Meneses - 313.587.9285
Elena Herrada - 313.974.0501
www.luum.org
Download flyers in Español and English


Minnesota


Minneapolis
Tuesday May 1

4:00 pm - March - Lake St. & Nicollet St.

MN Immigrant Rights Action Coalition (MIRAC)
651.389.9174
www.MNImmigrantRights.net
Download flyers in Español/English
Download Posters in Español and English

Minneapolis, MN: May Day March
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
05:30 PM-08:30 PM


Nevada


Las Vegas
Tuesday May 1

7:00 pm - US Federal Courthouse, 333 Las Vegas Blvd. S.

United Coalition for Immigrant Rights
740 N. Eastern Avenue, Suite 110
Las Vegas, NV 89101

ucir_lv@yahoo.com


New Jersey


Elizabeth
Tuesday May 1

11:00 am - Warinanco Park
Mass Meeting

NJ May 1 Coalition
973-736-0522 • info@njmay1.org
www.njmay1.org


New Mexico


Albuquerque, NM: May Day Mobilization!
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
03:00 PM-05:00 PM

Santa Fe, NM: May day Mobilization!
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
04:00 PM-07:00 PM


New York


Buffalo
Tuesday May 1
3:00 pm - McKinley High School on Elmwood Avenue
Marching to a Speakout at Elmwood and Bidwell
Car caravan from there to City Hall

Buffalo/WNY International Action Center
iacbuffalo@action-mail.org

New York City
Tuesday May
1
4:00 pm
- Rally & March
Union Square Park
, 14 St. & Broadway
Marching to
Federal Plaza/ Foley Square
(Site of the African Burial Ground)

NYC May 1 Coalition
55 W 17th St.
New York, NY 10011
646.291.2778 • www.may1.info>
Download flyers in Español and English

Spring Valley, NY: MAY DAY SUPPORT IMMIGRANT WORKERS IN ROCKLAND COUNTY!
March
New York
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
09:30 AM-12:30 PM

Ithaca, NY: No Human Is Illegal
Protest
New York
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-02:00 PM

Patchogue, NY: Immigrant Solidarity Day
Other
New York
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:30 PM-08:30 PM

New York, NY: May 1st Prayer Service and Community Rally
March
New York
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
02:00 PM-04:00 PM

New York, NY: May Day Rally & March
March
New York
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
04:00 PM-07:00 PM


North Carolina


Charlotte, NC: Rally for Immigrants & All Workers Rights - End the Wars at Home & Abroad
Protest
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
04:00 PM-06:00 PM



Pennsylvania


Pittsburgh
Tuesday May 1

5:00 pm - Rally/March - Allegheny County Jail, 2nd Ave.
Marching to
Mellon Square Park, 6th Ave.

Pittsburgh Friends of Immigrants

Pittsburgh, PA: May Day International Workers Day
Protest
Pennsylvania
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
04:00 PM-07:00 PM


Texas


San Antonio
Tuesday May 1

12:00 pm - Rally - Milam Park
6:00 pm - March

Southwest Workers Union
210.299.2666
www.swunion.org
Download flyers in Español/English

McAllen, TX: Rio Grande Valley, Texas - May 1st Actions
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
06:00 PM-09:00 PM

Austin, TX : Join us to march for immigrant rights!
Protest
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
05:00 PM-07:30 PM

Dallas, TX: MARCH for New American and Justice
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
05:00 PM-08:00 PM

San Juan, TX: Estamos Presentes!
March
U.S.
Immigrant Rights
06:00 PM-08:00 PM


Washington DC


Washington DC May Day Asian American RALLY!
March
Washington D.C.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-02:00 PM

Washington D.C. May Day Mobilization
March
Washington D.C.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
02:00 PM-07:00 PM


Washington


Yakima
Tuesday May 1

3:30 pm - March - Miller Park

Grupo Comunitario por Justicia y Derechos de los Inmigrantes
509.457.5867 or 509.930.6532

Bellingham, WA: Immigrant Solidarity March
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-06:00 PM

Seattle, WA: May Day March and Rally For Immigration Reform
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
03:00 PM-06:00 PM


Wisconsin


Madison
Tuesday May 1

12:00pm - Rally/March - Capitol to Brittingham Park

Union de Trabajadores Inmigrantes
Immigrant Workers Union
608.345.9544 or 608.446.3656
uti.madison@gmail.com
www.uniondetrabajadores.org
download flyers in Español or English

Milwaukee
Tuesday May 1

Un Dia Sin Latin@s/A Day Without Latin@s
Estatal Marcha por Derechos Civiles y Boicot/Statewide Civil Rights March & Boycott
12:00 pm - Voces de la Frontera, 1027 S. 5th St.

Voces de la Frontera
Wisconsin Legalization Coalition
414.643.1620 • vocesdelafrontera@sbcglobal.net
www.vocesdelafrontera.net
download flyers in Español/English

Milwaukee, WI: May Day Immigrant Rights March
March
U.S.
Immigrant Rights
12:00 PM-02:00 PM

Milwaukee, WI: UN DIA SIN LATINOS
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-02:00 PM

Madisn, WI: May Day Mobilization
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-03:00 PM

Madison WI: May First!
March
U.S.
May 1st 2007 Mobilization
12:00 PM-04:00 PM










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Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Immigration activists call for Great American Boycott 2007

One of the groups behind last years massive march in Los Angeles that drew a reported one-half million people is calling for a repeat of the last year’s boycott in support of immigrant’s rights.

Members of the March 25th Coalition, a coalition of labor unions, human rights activists, and immigrant rights groups called Monday for a national "Great American Boycott Two" on May 1, 2007.

The event is designed to raise awareness for immigrant’s rights and their contributions to the economy.

Group members said the boycott will be held to protest federal immigration raids on businesses that employ illegal immigrants and to press for "real legalization" for undocumented immigrants.

Last years boycott, fueled by anger over legislation that would have criminalized undocumented immigrants and fortified the U.S.-Mexico, temporarily shuttered businesses and schools across the country as over a million people took to the streets in Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami, Dallas, and other cities.

Organizers are hoping to recreate last year's success, and believe that recent events make this years boycott even more important.

According to the groups website, the boycott, "must take place in order to now put an end to the intense raids and deportations taking place around the country, and stopping the President’s push towards guest workers programs which only benefit corporations and enslave immigrant workers."

"This urgent and immediate need must be addressed as the first step towards achieving full legalization for the 12 to 20 million human beings living in the shadows and persecuted in this country while their labor and consumption is a cornerstone of this country’s economy."

"May 1 is the next necessary step towards a comprehensive Immigration Reform Bill that does not tear apart families or criminalizes the millions of people who have been forced by globalization and the so-called Free Trade agreements to leave their families, communities, country's of origin, and ways of life, to risk their lives and come here to work."

At an afternoon news conference press conference held on the steps of the downtown Los Angeles Federal Building. leaders said the raids on employers of illegal immigrants are "part of an intimidation campaign, strictly carried out in Latino residential communities and workplaces," and are "part of the nationwide `Return to Sender Operation' officially begun in June 2006 by (Immigration and Customs Enforcement) agents, under strict orders of the Department of Homeland Security and President Bush."

The organizers are also asking for the termination of free trade agreements such as NAFTA and CAFTA, workers rights, and an end to border vigilantism among other things, according to the group’s website

Pointing to a protest this past Saturday in downtown Los Angeles, that drew an estimated crowd of 10,000 to 15,000 marchers, leaders believes that now that immigration legislation is once again being discussed in Washington, the time is ripe for another round of marches and boycotts.

"The massive outpouring of immigrants and allies on the streets of downtown L.A. clearly points in the direction of another successful round of mega marches to inject the immigrant community, once again, into the national debate to influence Congress" one leader said.

More information on The Great American Boycott 2007 can be found at May Day Movement, or March 25 Coalition

UPDATE: For a list of May 1st events see:
Locations of May 1st Immigration Rallies



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