Leading LGBT Advocacy Organizations Respond to Senate Judiciary Committee Failure to Consider UAFA

nclr_smThis statement can be attributed to the National Center for Lesbian Rights, GLAAD, National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, United We Dream and Queer Undocumented Immigrant Project, Lambda Legal, Equality Federation and the National Center for Transgender Equality.

“We remain steadfast in our commitment to passing compassionate, comprehensive immigration reform that will provide a pathway to citizenship for the 11 million undocumented men, women and children living in our country, including at least 267,000 LGBT undocumented immigrants.

We are disappointed that certain senators threatened the entire immigration reform bill simply because it affords 28,500 same-sex binational couples equal immigration rights. At the same time, we thank Senator Leahy for standing up for these families. A majority of Americans—53 percent—believe that all consenting adults should have the right to get married and that gender should not play a role in who is considered family. [pullquote]It is unconscionable that lawmakers committed to equality and commonsense, humane immigration policy were forced to make a false choice between protecting the rights of same-sex binational couples and keeping a tenuous coalition together.[/pullquote]

It is unconscionable that lawmakers committed to equality and commonsense, humane immigration policy were forced to make a false choice between protecting the rights of same-sex binational couples and keeping a tenuous coalition together. This take-it-or-leave-it stance with regard to same-sex binational couples is not helpful when we all share the same goal of passing comprehensive immigration reform that provides a path to citizenship.

Beyond the issue of same-sex binational couples, the bill addresses many issues that will particularly benefit LGBT people, such as eliminating the one-year bar on applying for asylum, providing protections for DREAMers, and improving conditions for people held in detention facilities. These include important protections limiting the use of solitary confinement and explicitly prohibiting the use of this practice based solely on a detainee’s sexual orientation or gender identity. We will continue to work to improve the legislation as we fight for its passage because this bill is a historic step forward for all immigrants and the LGBT community.

Our primary goal is to pass a commonsense, compassionate immigration reform bill that puts our nation’s undocumented men, women and children on a pathway to citizenship. [pullquote]These include important protections limiting the use of solitary confinement and explicitly prohibiting the use of this practice based solely on a detainee’s sexual orientation or gender identity.[/pullquote]

We desperately need to reform our broken immigration system immediately because it dehumanizes, scapegoats and vilifies all immigrants, including LGBT immigrants. We will continue to advocate and support changes to the bill that will create the most accessible pathway to citizenship possible and allow all undocumented immigrants the opportunity to become citizens, and we will continue to ardently oppose draconian amendments that would make immigrants permanent second-class citizens and create undue hardships along a pathway to citizenship.

Every day we fail to reform our system, 1,100 families are torn apart. As a nation, we pride ourselves on keeping families united, and our immigration policies should reflect our commitment to keep families together—all families.

We stand firmly that the following principles must be included if we are to truly have comprehensive immigration reform legislation:

  • Provide a pathway to citizenship;
  • Ensure that family unity is at the heart of immigration law and policy;
  • End unjust detentions and deportations;
  • Uphold labor and employment standards, and ensure that the enforcement of immigration law does not undermine labor and employment rights;
  • Promote a dignified quality of life for border communities by ensuring border agencies uphold basic civil and human rights protections; and
  • Ensure immigrant members of our community are not relegated to second-class status with fewer rights and benefits.”

[From a News Release]

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1 Comment on "Leading LGBT Advocacy Organizations Respond to Senate Judiciary Committee Failure to Consider UAFA"

  1. Ned Flaherty | May 28, 2013 at 3:24 pm |

    The Republican Party is 100% responsible for the abject absence of fairness for LGBT individuals, couples, and families in the Comprehensive Immigration Reform bill.

    Republicans wrote their hatred directly into the official 2012-2015 Republican Party platform last August, and specifically vowed to block fair treatment of LGBT people in immigration, employment, and other areas.

    Republicans reconfirmed their hatred at their April 2013 spring convention by voting — unanimously! — to prevent any fairness to LGBT people.

    All this year, Republicans publicly vowed that if any clauses giving fairness to LGBT people got added to the Comprehensive Immigration Reform bill, then the Republican Party would block reform for all immigrants.

    It is a euphemism for NCLR and its partners to merely say that they’re “disappointed” because “certain Senators” did something that is “not helpful.”

    Every in-depth news article has quoted Republican leaders promising that there will be no progress for anyone if there is any progress for LGBT people. Only Republicans said this. Every Republican leader in Congress said this. No Republican has said anything different.

    The LGBT community will never get fair treatment if we continue accepting such wholesale betrayal and bigotry.

    Ned Flaherty
    Boston, MA

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