Jose Antonio Vargas

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Coming out undocumented: How much of a political effect has the movement had?

Photo by Leslie Berestein Rojas/KPCC

A student activist's t-shirt, December 2010

It’s been two years since a group of young people in Chicago made official a movement that had been slowly growing among undocumented students, holding a “coming out” day at a local park to go public with their undocumented status as a political act.

In that time – mostly during the last year – the larger movement they launched has taken off exponentially. It received perhaps its biggest boost last June, when former Washington Post reporter and Pulitzer winner Jose Antonio Vargas confessed to his undocumented status in a New York Times essay and launched an advocacy project, drawing worldwide attention.

Much else has happened in the last year: Last summer, the Obama administration released guidelines urging immigration officials to use prosecutorial discretion when pursuing deportation cases. This involved giving special consideration to certain immigrants, including people who had been here since they were children, a demographic that makes up the bulk of the young activists involved in the coming-out movement. In August, the guidelines became the backbone of an Obama administration plan to review some 300,000 deportation cases to screen out these “low priority” immigrants, a process that began late last year.

This week, more young people are going public with their status around the country as part of what’s by now become an annual ritual, National Coming out the Shadows Week. As they do, it’s worth taking a look at how much influence, if any, a movement that seeks to attach faces to those who would benefit from legal status has had on the policy changes seen this year.

Last April in a post, before the Obama administration’s new guidelines were issued, I asked several young people who had come out with their status – and readers in general – whether they thought it had become safer to reveal publicly that one is in the U.S. illegally. “Yes, it’s true!” responded a reader named Rigo. “I haven’t felt this safe in a while.”

In another post the same month, undocumented UCLA graduate and activist Nancy Meza described the role of being “out” in the peer support networks that have come to the aid of many a young person facing deportation, launching petitions and helping several win reprieves long before the federal guidelines crystallized who stood a better chance of staying.

“What we’ve seen is that the more public you are, the more out there you are, the more public support you have, especially in deportation cases,” said Meza, 24. “People have seen you be involved with the community, your activism, and they are more willing to help. I think that going public is one of the ways that a person could have a better opportunity of getting deferred action.”

This is true, said Louis DiSipio, an immigration expert and political science professor at UC Irvine. There is a safety-in-numbers aspect to coming out for undocumented students and graduates involved in the movement, and to date, most of those involved have been supported and protected by their peers if they face deportation.

“By coming out, they are asserting their right to protest, but it also makes it harder for the Obama administration or local authorities acting under the Department of Homeland Security to arrest those students,” DiSipio said by in a phone interview.

As to the coming-out movement’s political effect at the national level, that’s up for debate. Frank Sharry, director the Washington, D.C. immigrant advocacy organization America’s Voice, believes the movement “has made a huge difference.”

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Quote of the moment: The student ‘most likely to save the world’ on status and studies

Photo by Josh Self/Flickr (Creative Commons)

College students and graduates campaigning for passage of the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act, heard yesterday in a Senate subcommittee, staged a mock graduation ceremony this morning in Washington, D.C.

Among those who participated was Mandeep Chahal, an undocumented UC David pre-med student who recently received a last-minute reprieve from deportation to India, along with her mother. The immigrant advocacy group America’s Voice tweeted quotes from participants as they spoke, including this one attributed to Chahal:

It scared me, so I told almost no one. I focused on my grades, I thought if I ignored my secret problem, it would go away.

It’s been noted that Chahal, who arrived in the U.S. at age 6, was voted “Most Likely to Save the World” by her classmates at Los Altos High School. She and her mother were granted a stay of deportation by the federal government following a social media campaign and signature-gathering effort.

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2011 version of the Dream Act to get its first Senate hearing

Photo by CSU Stanislaus Photo/Flickr (Creative Commons)

A new and slightly revised version of the federal Dream Act will get its first Senate hearing tomorrow morning, more than a month after Illinois Democratic Sen. Dick Durbin and other top Senate Democrats announced plans to bring it back.

The new Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act differs only slightly from the one approved by the House last December, which moved to the Senate but failed to draw enough votes for cloture.

Like prior versions, the bill would grant conditional legal status to qualifying young people who are in the United States illegally but were brought here as minors under 16, so long as they attend college or join the military. There are only a few key differences from last year’s version:

  • The age cap for applicants, which was reduced to age 29 last year, has been bumped back up to 35 years of age or younger
  • The length of conditional legal status before applicants may obtain permanent legal resident status has been reduced to six years, as in an earlier version, from 10 years
  • This version would, as did an earlier version (but not the House-approved one), seek to repeal a ban on in-state tuition rates for beneficiaries

To obtain permanent legal status, in addition to maintaining “good moral character” during the conditional period, beneficiaries would need to: a) have acquired a degree from an institute of higher learning, or at least completed two years in good standing toward a bachelor’s or higher degree; b) served at least two years in “uniformed services” and, if discharged, received an honorable discharge. More details can be found in a previous post.

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From KPCC’s AirTalk: Would you ‘come out’ if you were in Jose Antonio Vargas’ shoes?

A growing movement among undocumented college students that involves “coming out” with their immigration status has now inspired the same from a well-known journalist, Pulitzer winner Jose Antonio Vargas. His confession that he is undocumented, published yesterday in the New York Times Magazine, has drawn intense reaction while attaching a white-collar identity to the debate over illegal immigration.

A segment on today’s AirTalk show, hosted by the Los Angeles Times’ David Lazarus (filling in for Larry Mantle), took up the Vargas story along with the broader coming-out movement. I joined David and other guests to talk about the movement, the risks involved in going public, and the proposed federal legislation known as the Dream Act, which would grant conditional legal status to qualifying youths brought here before age 16 if they go to college or join the military.

It would apply to young people who were brought here as Vargas was, flown to the United States from the Philippines when he was 12 years old.

Among the guests were Marco Castillo, a graphic designer from San Diego who as a young professional five years ago decided to go public with his undocumented status as part of a religious campaign (and who is now working toward a green card); Nancy Meza, a recent graduate of UCLA who has been active in local efforts to lobby for the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act; and David Leopold, an immigration attorney based in Cleveland and former president of the American Immigration Lawyers’ Association.

Leopold was interviewed for a piece yesterday in The Atlantic that detailed the many risks that Vargas, a former Washington Post reporter, has subjected himself to by “coming out.”

The audio, replete with callers’ questions and comments, can be downloaded here.

A few of the questions that were featured on the AirTalk website:

Is Vargas’ high-profile “coming out” the beginning of a new immigration reform movement?

Would you have “come out” if you were in Vargas’ shoes?

What do you think should happen to him and people in a similar position?

Readers react to the confession of an undocumented Pulitzer winner

Jose Antonio Vargas during a panel appearance in July 2008, the year he and other Washington Post reporters shared a Pulitzer for coverage of the Virginia Tech shooting.

It’s not an overstatement to say that the story of Jose Antonio Vargas, a Pulitzer-winning former Washington Post journalist who has admitted to being undocumented, has made its way around the world by now, from Europe to the Philippines.

In a confessional essay published yesterday in the New York Times Magazine, Vargas related how his mother sent him to the United States from the Philippines at age 12 with a smuggler, how he learned he was undocumented at 16 and how he has kept the secret since, navigating school and career with a network of close confidantes, false papers and an out-of-state driver’s license.

The story spread quickly through social media channels, prompting reactions that have ranged from intense anger to applause. Pundits, even former employers have weighed in with their opinions, including San Francisco Chronicle Editor Phil Bronstein, who once employed Vargas and wrote about being “duped” before saying that he hoped the story would at least “help craft sane immigration policy.”

Multi-American readers have reacted to the Vargas story in different ways, some calling for his deportation, others identifying with him.

W. Steven Chou pointed out how he and Vargas share a similar background, save for one thing:

The only difference between Mr. Vargas and me is that I came to the US at age 9 with a valid green card because I was lucky enough to have parents who had gotten their green cards through employment.  Mr. Vargas’ story shows how compelling it is to pass the DREAM Act.  These young people who came to the US through no fault of their own should not be punished for the deeds of their parents.  So long as these young people are productive to the society why should they be denied their proper status here in the US?  There is no other difference between Mr. Vargas and the other people who can benefit from the DREAM Act and me.  We all grew up as Americans.

Noel Beale wrote:

Does this mean he can be deported now? Hopefully, as then someone who did not sneak into the US via human trafficking, or someone that didn’t continued to live as a criminal and showed a total lack of respect for US law, can find a job in this hard economic times.

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Jose Antonio Vargas: ‘I’m an American, I just don’t have the right papers’

The man behind what has by far been the biggest immigration story of the week, Pulitzer-winning journalist Jose Antonio Vargas, sent out this tweet a little while ago:

There comes a moment when you just crack, when enough is enough. @DefineAmerican

The emotion behind the decision that Vargas made to reveal that he is undocumented is evident in this video from his new website, Define American, an online campaign that the former Washington Post staff writer has founded in hopes of changing the conversation on immigration reform. In it, he presents his own definition:

I define “American” as someone who works really hard, someone who is proud to be in this country and wants to contribute to it. I’m independent. I pay taxes. I’m self-sufficient. I’m an American, I just don’t have the right papers. I take full responsibility for my actions, and I’m sorry for the laws that I have broken.

Vargas confessed his secret in a New York Times magazine story, published today. When he was 12 years old, he was flown to the United States by a smuggler, a man that his mother introduced him to as his “uncle.” Living with his grandparents in the Bay Area, he learned of his status at 16, when he went to a Department of Motor Vehicles office to obtain his driver’s permit and was told there that his green card was fake.

By coming out as undocumented, Vargas has opened himself to significant personal and legal risks, The Atlantic reported today. In a short piece in the National Review, Mark Krikorian of the immigration-restriction think tank Center for Immigration Studies took the Washington Post to task as well for employing him.

The New York Times reported today that Vargas initally offered his story to the Washington Post, but the newspaper passed on publishing the story.

Why a Pulitzer winner is coming out as undocumented

Photo by PoliticalActivityLaw.com/Flickr (Creative Commons)

Award-winning journalist Jose Antonio Vargas, right

Revealing one’s undocumented status as a political act has so far been embraced mostly by college students, young people eager to put a face on those who would benefit from proposed legislation known as the Dream Act. Now, that face has become a little older, a little more familiar.

In a piece published today in the New York Times Magazine, former Washington Post reporter Jose Antonio Vargas reveals the secret that has haunted him throughout his career: He is undocumented.

Vargas, who shared a Pulitzer Prize three years ago for coverage of the Virginia Tech massacre, was brought here illegally by a smuggler from the Philippines when he was 12 years old, at his mother’s behest. He writes:

We’re not always who you think we are. Some pick your strawberries or care for your children. Some are in high school or college. And some, it turns out, write news articles you might read. I grew up here. This is my home. Yet even though I think of myself as an American and consider America my country, my country doesn’t think of me as one of its own.

In a stunning confession, Vargas tells the story of how he managed to navigate through high school and college, and eventually into a coveted internship and a Washington Post staff writer job, with the help of an intimate network of supporters who knew his secret, among them his grandfather, a legal immigrant who initially arranged for his false papers. He recalls how he researched which states would be most apt to grant him a driver’s license, settling on Oregon. He learned early on that revealing his secret typically led to closed doors, so he kept it to himself, sharing it only with a few close confidantes.

He writes that he was inspired to tell his story by the young people who have revealed their status recently as they campaign for the Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act, which would grant conditional legal status to youths brought here before age 16 if they go to college or join the military. When he was younger, Vargas would have qualified.

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