Why I spoke up at Obamas immigration speech last week
OPINION I interrupted President Barack Obama last Friday during his immigration speech because there was something inherently wrong and I needed to speak up. I recall the…
OPINION
I interrupted President Barack Obama last Friday during his immigration speech because there was something inherently wrong and I needed to speak up.
I recall the president speaking about family unity and how with his executive actions, children and parents alike will be able to sleep at night without fear of separation. He said that after years of living in fear, children will no longer have to fear coming home from school to an empty house.
To a point this is true. Approximately 5 million immigrant families will be eligible to come out of the shadows under the presidents executive actions. They will be eligible for relief from deportation, a work permit, a social security number, and possibly a drivers license. Most importantly, they will be liberated from the fear of deportation.
SEE ALSO: The facts of President Obamas action on immigration
But the rest of the 11 million undocumented immigrantsthe ones who wont qualify for Obamas executive actionswill continue to live in the shadows. That includes many parents of Dreamers, members of the LGTBQ community, and day laborers who desperately fought for relief.
It also includes my parents.
Many have asked me why I interrupted the presidents immigration speech on Friday. I tell them I spoke up for my parents and the millions of others who will continue to live in the shadows. I spoke up because it is unfair that those who tirelessly pushed for the president to act on immigration will be left out.
My parents have been living in the United States for 19 years, yet they wont qualify for Obamas executive actions because their four children are recipients of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, not U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents.
My parents have sacrificed everything so that my siblings and I may take advantage of the opportunities America has to offerand thats exactly what Ive done. I earned a bachelors degree in mechanical engineering form Arizona State University, and Im currently pursuing a masters degree in secondary education at Grand Canyon University.
SEE ALSO: Obama on his immigration actions: This is a first step
Though my parents and millions of others will be left out from protection under Obamas executive actions, I still view the presidents announcement as historic, because I know it will change the lives of millions of peoplepeople I care about. I view this announcement by the president a victory that was accomplished by many of us who kept pushing for the president to act.
But I also view it as something Obama couldve done sooner. He couldve acted by the end of the summer, as he had promised. But instead, he chose politics over families when he decided to delay taking executive action until after the elections. By doing that, he allowed the suffering of our people to be prolonged.
And we also cant forget the Obama administration has deported more than 2 million people. Those are families who will be scared for life. Those are families who will carry the scars of immigration officials coming into their homes and separating them from their children.
Mr. President, our community is hardworking, family-oriented, and of good moral character. I ask you to expand deferred action to the 6 million who will be left out, because I want undocumented families, like mine, to be able to come out of the shadows and live without fear.
SEE ALSO: Obamas immigration plan protects millions, but leaves many out