August 27, 2013
PASO DEL NORTE BRIDGE — The inches Maricruz Valtierra Zuniga
stood from the United States border on Tuesday morning could be as close as the
new bride ever gets to this country.
In a wedding ceremony atop the international bridge, witnessed
by family members, a U.S. congressman and Customs and Border Protection agents,
Valtierra, a 25-year-old from Mexico, married her longtime boyfriend, Edgar
Falcon, 27, a U.S. citizen who calls El Paso home. A mistake authorities say
Valtierra made when she was a teenager — falsely claiming to be a U.S. citizen
— means she is barred from ever entering this country, or establishing a life here
with her husband.
“Yes, I can still go to Juárez to see her,” Falcon said,
acknowledging that other couples are separated by hundreds or thousands of
miles. “But the whole dynamic is that in order to live with her and start a
family, I have to exile myself out of my own country.”
A 1996 immigration bill signed by then-President Bill Clinton
made falsely claiming U.S. citizenship an offense so serious that it barred
offenders from ever reentering the country. Falcon said that in 2005, when
oral declarations of citizenship were still common, Valtierra's older sister
incorrectly claimed that the siblings were U.S. citizens. Falcon said he and
his fiancee did not realize how dire the situation was until they decided to
get married and visited the U.S. Consulate in Ciudad Juárez.
Tuesday’s nuptials on the bridge connecting the sister cities
was by all accounts a publicity stunt. But Falcon said they did it to send a
message.
“We want to present another face to America,” he said. “Immigration does not
only affect illegal immigrants but it also affects us as U.S. citizens and is
affecting a lot of families.”
About a year and a half ago, Falcon reached out to American Families United
(AFU), a pro-immigration reform organization that concentrates specifically on
the complexities of marriage and immigration. The group has worked with U.S.
Rep. Beto O’Rouke, D-El Paso,
who was on hand Tuesday morning to witness the ceremony, give the newlyweds a
wedding gift, and discuss legislation he intends to file to address Falcon and
Valtierra’s unique situation.
O’Rourke said the American Families United Act would allow
Department of Homeland Security officials or U.S. immigration judges the
discretion to determine the outcome in deportation or inadmissibility
proceedings when a person is an immediate family member of a U.S. citizen. It
would also establish waivers under which certain applicants — including those
with a history of misrepresenting their legal status — could reside in the U.S.
while their applications are being reviewed. The congressman said he intends to
file the legislation when members return next month after their August recess.
It is unclear what path the proposed legislation will take, but
O’Rourke acknowledged intense lobbying lay ahead.
“Our message to Republicans is, immigration reform really
addresses the problem of the undocumented immigrants in the United States,” he
said. “What about a guy like Edgar who is a U.S. citizen who wants to be with
his family? This picture here says it all.”
Republicans in the U.S. House have said they have no intention
of tackling an omnibus immigration bill the way the Senate did. Instead, they
say they will take a piecemeal approach and focus on security at the border
first.
The tone doesn’t appear ripe for compromise. Late last
week, U.S. Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., the chairman of the powerful House
Judiciary Committee, wrote
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano urging a review of
the country’s process for accepting asylum seekers. The chairman argued that
the system had been gamed after officials recorded a spike in the number of
requests from Mexican nationals seeking protection from gangs, a so-called
credible-fear claim.
Two days later, the chairman issued a statement criticizing an
Aug. 23 directive
from the White House to Immigration and Customs Enforcement urging a review of
deportation cases involving adults who are the primary caretakers of minors;
parents or guardians involved in a family court proceeding; or parents or
guardians of minor children who are citizens or permanent residents of the U.S.
O’Rourke said he wants to take a page from the GOP handbook and
stress family unity.
“It’s incumbent upon me and others to try to work with Chairman
Goodlatte,” he said. “I will make the case that we have U.S. citizens in his
district, and certainly in mine, who just want to be with their families. I
can’t think of a more core and American value than family reunification.”
Bruce Morrison, AFU’s legislative director, said that under
existing rules, Falcon is forced to choose between his love and his country.
“This is not about asylum, this is not about illegal border
crossings,” he said. “The important thing about making public policy is to be
able to tell one set of facts from the other. They’re dramatizing that their
love is bigger than the border.”
See the entire article at http://www.texastribune.org/2013/08/27/wedding-ceremony-seeks-highlight-immigration-battl/
No comments:
Post a Comment