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Wednesday, January 22, 2025

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Trump targets DEI and civil service protections, striking fear in some federal workers; WA bill would expand automatic voter registration; Iowa farmers on board with corn-based jet fuel; New wildfire near Los Angeles explodes to 8,000 acres, forces evacuations; ND back on familiar ground in debating ballot-question threshold.

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Trump's pardons of January 6th participants spark mixed reactions, federal DEI suspensions raise equity concerns, diversity in medicine faces challenges post-affirmative action and Citizens United continues to amplify big money in politics.

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Winter blues? Alaskans cure theirs at the Cordova Iceworm Festival, Trump's energy plans will impact rural folks, legislation in Virginia aims to ensure rural communities get adequate EV charging stations, and a retreat for BIPOC women earns rave reviews.

Mass deportation of immigrants opposed by most U.S. voters

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Friday, November 1, 2024   

A strong majority of voters across party lines want lawmakers to create a path to citizenship for America's 11 million undocumented immigrants, not mass deportation, according to a new survey.

Jennifer Piper, west region program director for the American Friends Service Committee, pointed to a series of so-called "show your papers" laws passed in a handful of states between 2006 and 2013 that led to some of the highest deportation numbers in the nation.

"We know what the policies of mass deportation look like intimately," she said, "and what we found is our businesses suffered, our schools suffered, our kids suffered."

Surveyed voters said allowing law-abiding undocumented residents living in the United States for years and paying their taxes to apply for citizenship is a better way forward than a deportation program. Such programs would tap local law enforcement, the National Guard and possibly the military and cost more than $100 billion.

Each year, immigrants generate $12 billion worth of economic output in New Mexico, and Piper said people deserve the same rights as commercial goods and capital to move safely across borders. She pointed to the Registry Act as one solution, which has been gaining co-sponsors in both the U.S. House and Senate and "which would allow people who are undocumented - who are our neighbors, who have been here a long time - to come forward and get on a path to citizenship. It just requires the changing of one date in existing immigration law."

To counter a barrage of anti-immigrant messaging and disinformation that has become part of mainstream conversations, the AFSC has launched a billboard and radio ad campaign aiming to welcome all people to the United States.

Support for this reporting was provided by the Carnegie Corporation of New York.


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