GOP resolution on citizenship riles immigrant-rights and labor groups
By Joseph B. Frazier
The Associated
Press
PORTLAND — Labor and pro-immigrant groups on Friday
denounced a resolution by the Oregon Republican Party to deny citizenship to
American-born children of noncitizen immigrants, calling it a symptom of
ignorance and racism, and representative of a broader pattern of anti-immigrant
sentiment.
While some speakers said they doubt it will become law, they
said it could be used as a wedge to divide the state and could lead to other
problems.
"This resolution exposes the Oregon Republican Party as a
hateful, misinformed party that is too extreme for Oregon," said Chris Ferlazzo
of Jobs for Justice, a coalition of more than 80 labor and immigrant rights
groups that supports immigrant causes.
Amy Langdon, the party's executive
director, called the resolution "more of a statement to let people know where we
stand."
Republican gubernatorial candidate Ron Saxton has proposed a
tough line on immigration but has not publicly embraced the
resolution.
Ferlazzo said the party's stance was part of a wider trend
that has seen moves to prohibit renting homes or selling merchandise to
undocumented foreigners.
"It opens the door to what we would like to
believe is impossible," he said at a gathering at Reed College in
Portland.
Eunice Cho of the National Network of Immigrant and Refugee
Rights said that while the resolution may be merely symbolic, it demonstrates
"the level to which immigrants are unwelcome in this country."
If
children of all noncitizen immigrants are barred from citizenship, as the
resolution proposes, she said, "we would create a class of people in this
country who have no state [to call home]."
The groups announced a
Portland march Sept. 3, Labor Day weekend. Such events drew several thousand in
Eugene and Salem before Oregon's May primary when Saxton and GOP challenger
Kevin Mannix emphasized strict immigration measures.
The resolution was
written by Jim Lehman, chairman of the Wasco County Republican Party, who
acknowledged it wasn't likely to become law any time soon.
"I wanted to
light the fire, and the resolution was the first step," he said recently.
"There's enough people that want to see something done and they don't want to
see the abuses."
Legal experts say making the resolution a law would
require the improbable combination of two-thirds of Congress and three-fourths
of the state legislatures agreeing to alter or erase the 14th Amendment to the
U.S. Constitution, which confers citizenship on everyone born in the United
States.


