And the real credit goes to these DREAM kids who are among the bravest people in our country.
They've been "coming out" for the past few years,
putting their lives at stake,
certainly their futures, to try to get the DREAM Act passed. It's their stories that have made the difference in this debate.
Here's one of the most famous:
Update: Jonathan Chait's post on the subject includes
this analysis:
Obama came into office with a two-part plan to handle immigration. First, he increased enforcement of the laws, stepping up deportations, in hopes that this would convince hard-liners to make a deal on large-scale reform. Second, he tried to pass, as an immediate compromise measure, the DREAM Act. That would offer legal status to people who came to the United States as children, so long as they have avoided legal trouble and completed a certain level of education or served in the military.
Deportations increased but the DREAM Act failed and the only people who gained were the right wingers who were thrilled to see undocumented workers and their innocent children torn from their homes. I think this is a perfect example of the
how the administration managed to enact conservative policies while being simultaneously portrayed as a left winger and socialist. For me, it's the worst of both worlds in that bad policies are enacted, either as useless efforts to show good will or some presidential desire to have it both ways, while liberalism gets systematically weakened even more than it is.
It seems they have belatedly discovered that this "strategy" was resulting in so many of their own constituents being angry or depressed that it endangered their re-election. But whether it has actually resulted in a change of tactics and strategy for governance in a second term is unknown.
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