NCLR President Janet Murguia says Trump’s immigration policies ‘are not real solutions’

In a speech this week to supporters in Phoenix, Ariz., Donald Trump outlined his long-awaited immigration platform.

The National Council of La Raza (NCLR) has long been highly critical of Trump’s scapegoating and demonization of immigrants and Latinos in his rhetoric, but the organization stated it believes that his proposal also deepens the already wide rift between the candidate and our community.

“There was no ‘pivot’ tonight. Instead Donald Trump doubled down on an immigration platform that continues to be based on falsehoods, distortions and dog whistles culled directly from the most extreme elements of the anti-immigrant movement. In short, Donald Trump threw cold water on those who were expecting a real and workable solution on this issue,” stated Janet Murguía, NCLR president and CEO.

Janet Murguía’s full statement (made on the night of the Trump speech) is below:

Like the majority of our fellow Americans, NCLR supports modernizing our immigration system so that it increases effective legal channels for those seeking to enter; provides a way for those who are long-term residents to come forward, be vetted, and fully integrate into American society as millions of immigrants have done in our history; and maintains strong, smart, effective border controls.

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump built his campaign on promises of building a wall, cutting legal immigration and creating a massive deportation force to deport all undocumented immigrants, along with their U.S.-citizen family members. In the last couple of weeks, there has been much speculation about whether the details of his signature issue has changed, muddled by contradictory statements from both the candidate and people in his campaign.

As I testified when the Senate last considered immigration reform: when rhetoric meets reality, reality wins every time. Tonight, the Trump campaign confirmed that it remains mired in rhetoric rather than reality; his proposed immigration policy still rests on building a wall and imposing mass deportations. These are not real solutions, and most Americans are opposed to those measures. Experts agree that a mass deportation strategy would blow a hole through the budget, reduce economic growth and tax revenues, result in massive violations of civil rights, tear families apart, and potentially remove millions of U.S. citizens from the land of their birth.

In addition, Trump would:
• Repeal Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), and with the stroke of a pen throw more than 700,000 DREAMers back into unlawful status.
• Try to change the Constitution to eliminate birthright citizenship.
• Support state laws that have resulted in racial profiling of Latinos.
• Cut visas for legal immigrants, which would encourage more to come without authorization.
• Impose an unconstitutional religious test on new immigrants and refugees seeking to enter the United States.

These proposals would not modernize the immigration system, nor are they supported by the vast majority of Americans.

In reality, immigration is the product of our uniquely dynamic economy, our country’s traditions of liberty and equality, a society that is increasingly connected with the rest of the world, and of families who want to be together. But while our economy, our society and our families have changed since reforms enacted decades ago, our immigration system has not.

In sum, this is not a debate about more or less immigration. It is about regulating the immigration that is already happening, determining how much of it will happen within legal channels, and within our control. It is about modernizing the immigration system so that those wishing to live here do so within the law rather than around it, enabling us to focus enforcement efforts on upholding national security and public safety.

Any proposal put forth should be judged on the merits of how it advances these goals. Today, we had a chance to hear more specifics, and no amount of wordsmithing can hide the fact that Trump is sticking to positions that are impractical, expensive and unconstitutional. By refusing to do anything meaningful to allow long-term undocumented residents to come forward and get right with the law, and by cutting legal channels for people to enter lawfully, Trump’s immigration policy platform remains grossly inadequate. And by declining to disavow his earlier promise of mass deportations, Trump showed he is still not willing to acknowledge reality.

What impact this may have electorally is for voters to decide. But it should be noted that the rift Trump has created between himself and the Latino community is far deeper than a policy disagreement. Trump kicked off his campaign with a wholesale characterization of Mexican immigrants as “criminals, rapists and drug dealers,” and then called into question an American judge’s ability to do his job based on his Mexican ancestry. NCLR and dozens of other civil rights organizations have called on Trump to apologize for these horrific remarks. We, and the American people, are still awaiting such an apology.

KCK resident shares experience of getting through flooding

Editor’s note: Bob Evans, a freelance writer in Kansas City, Kan., shares his experiences of getting through the floods on Friday night.

by Bob Evans

Weather in Kansas City has always been difficult to predict as many of the TV meteorologists have explained so many times after they miss the forecast, but, still, they do their best to warn the public what’s in the stars.

Just look at the last week and the storms that roared through the metro. Probably the most intense of these stalled almost directly over the Westport area on Friday, Aug. 26. While many areas received between two and three inches of precipitation, the area around Westport received six inches of rain.

I happened to be at the Just Off Broadway Theatre for the debut of their current production “A Soft Escape,” a comedy that stirs memories of The Jeffersons and Jackie Gleason’s The Honeymooners. The show began with no fanfare, but about 15 minutes into it, thunder could be heard rumbling and crackling outside. Soon after, torrential rain could be heard and the actors had to nearly shout to be heard over the storm.

At intermission, the audience all headed to the windows to see how heavy the rain was falling—and it was shocking. Torrential rain continued through the second act. After the show, an opening night party allowed the audience the opportunity to eat some sandwiches and snacks until the rain subsided. And, that was almost 45-minutes.

Upon exit, proprietor Harvey Williams was directing patrons to drive south on Wyandotte Street and up a steep hill to avoid overflowing street drains. Once on Linwood Boulevard, emergency crews could be seen directing traffic away from the Westport area.

So, now, out of the theater, safe in my car, I needed to figure a way home to Kansas City, Kan. Parts of Broadway remain closed for some construction. Southwest Boulevard always seems to present problems. Interstate 670 was closed for the weekend, so the Bottoms would not be a good choice.

The best option seemed to be Interstate 70. So, the plan was to use Main and then switch to Broadway once beyond the construction. Good plan. All was fine until about Eighth and Broadway and emergency crews had stopped all traffic headed over the Broadway Bridge by the old airport.

To make things more difficult, the loop to the right from Broadway to Interstate 70 was flooded. Traffic on I-70 heading west was stopped. Police crews re-routed traffic to turn left to get to I-70.

Once on I-70 what could go wrong? Well, the sky opened up again, and visibility was barely one car length beyond headlights. Traffic was moving about 20 mph on the Interstate. Just changing lanes was a near nightmare. I wanted to exit and go down Minnesota Avenue. I could not get in the exit lane. So, I continued on I-70 westbound.

I considered getting off at 38th Street, but that’s a low area and I had no idea what I might find there, so I continued to 635. Once there, I exited at State and soon after moved to Parallel and home.

What is strange is that the trip from my house to Just Off Broadway Theatre is generally about 15-20 minutes, depending on traffic and detours. The trip home was well over an hour, after a 45-minute wait after the play.

I checked with my cousin when I got home to make sure she was home and safe. She said that she had to stop at Quick Trip on Roe for over 45 minutes because she could not see to drive. She chose to come back 18th Street and go through town because she was not sure where there might be problems.

Governor to hospital association: ‘Is that really in the best interests of all Kansans?’

Letter from Governor Sam Brownback in response to a letter from Tom Bell of the Kansas Hospital Association:

I appreciate the dialogue about the best way to address a very real problem, our struggling rural hospitals. Last I week I put forward a solution to eliminate the 4 percent Medicaid reduction by using the provider tax to draw down additional federal dollars which could then be redistributed back to the providers.

In response, the Kansas Hospital Association has put forward an alternative. Their option is to expand Obamacare and greatly increase the size and scope of KanCare, a program they say isn’t working well. Why would we expand a program they claim still has room for improvement? And why would we expand eligibility to able-bodied single adults when disabled Kansans are still waiting for services? At the end of the day, every big government program is about one thing, taking money from the many and giving it to the few. Is that really in the best interests of all Kansans?

I believe the citizens of our state would be better served by taking the following actions: 1. Eliminate the 4 percent Medicaid reduction by drawing down additional federal funding (something that has been done several times before without objection); 2. Continue working to eliminate the waiting lists for disabled Kansans; 3. Keep working hard to improve KanCare as the managed care organization contracts go back out to bid this fall; 4. Allow Dr. Colyer’s Rural Health Working Group to complete their work and develop proposals; and 5. Prepare to come to work in January for the 2017 legislative session with proposals that serve the best interests of all Kansans.

I very much look forward to that discussion.

Sam Brownback

Governor