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Call All UAFA and RFA Sponsors to Publicly Support LGBT Rights in Comprehensive Immigration Reform

It’s great that 60 members of the House of Representatives LGBT Equality Caucus, led by Rep. Tammy Baldwin, have publicly called for the inclusion of LGBT immigration rights in any comprehensive immigration reform legislation. http://immigrationequality.org/blog/?p=1606

Yet according to our current Act on Principles pubic whip count, there are 118 members of the House who already have gone on record as co-sponsors of H.R. 1024, the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA), the LGBT immigration rights bill authored by Rep. Jerry Nadler. http://www.actonprinciples.org/uafa-house/ There are an additional two members of the House (Reps. Baca and Cohen) who have gone on record in support of H.R. 2709 the Reuniting Families Act (RFA), a broader family immigration bill authored by Rep. Mike Honda, which fully incorporates UAFA. http://www.actonprinciples.org/rfa-house/

While the 60 signers of the open letter and our hard-working advocates for LGBT immigration rights are to be commended for their leadership on moving this issue forward, we collectively still have a long way to go to achieve LGBT immigration equality…

At a minimum, we need ALL 118 co-sponsors of UAFA and two additional co-sponsors of RFA to go on the public record in support of inclusion of LGBT immigration rights in comprehensive immigration reform. But even securing the public commitment of those 120 members will still mean we are long, long way from the 218 votes we need for a majority position to secure our LGBT immigration rights.

Finally, we also need parallel work on our Senators, where there are only 24 co-sponsors of UAFA, a long way from the 51 votes we will need…

Each one of you reading this can do something to help move this forward…

Use our Act on Principles public whip counts to identify what positions your Representative and Senators have taken on UAFA (and RFA) and lobby for their sponsorship of both bills and their public support for inclusion of LGBT immigration rights in comprehensive immigration reform. Use the public whip count tool to update any positions you learn about so the rest of us know where to focus our lobbying efforts.

Act on principles. No delay. No excuses.

For more background on LGBT immigration rights: http://www.actonprinciples.org/2009/10/26/lgbt-and-immigrant-rights-are-civil-rights-–-support-uafa-and-rfa-aop-immigration/

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Call UAFA bill sponors to thank them and ask them to co-sponsor the Reuniting Families Act (RFA) #aop #immigration

In an Act On Principles blog post, I made the case that both LGBT AND immigrant rights are civil rights and that we ought to support both the UAFA (HR.1024) and RFA (HR.2709) immigration bills. At last count, there are 116 co-sponsors of the LGBT immigration bill UAFA. Slightly less than half of them have signed on to co-sponsor the broader family immigration bill RFA, which includes all the provisions of UAFA.

We should thank all the co- sponsors of UAFA and now ask them to also co-sponsor RFA. I have used the AOP Whip Count data to generate the list below of the UAFA co-sponsors who have yet to co-sponsor RFA. The list also includes the phone number of each member and a link to their website.
If you are able to persuade a member to confirm support for RFA, or even to co-sponsor the bill, please record and share what you have learned on the RFA whip count .

REPRESENTATIVE

PTY

DIST.

CONTACT

Baird, Brian

D

WA-03

202-225-3536

Becerra, Xavier

D

CA-31

202-225-6235

Berkley, Shelley

D

NV-01

202-225-5965

Berman, Howard

D

CA-28

202-225-4695

Bishop, Timothy

D

NY-01

202-225-3826

Brady, Robert

D

PA-01

202-225-4731

Conyers, John Jr.

D

MI-14

202-225-5126

Courtney, Joe

D

CT-02

202-225-2076

Crowley, Joseph

D

NY-07

202-225-3965

Cummings, Elijah

D

MD-07

202-225-4741

DeFazio, Peter

D

OR-04

202-225-6416

Edwards, Donna

D

MD-04

202-225-8699

Eshoo, Anna

D

CA-14

202-225-8104

Gutierrez, Luis

D

IL-04

202-225-8203

Hare, Phil

D

IL-17

202-225-5905

Inslee, Jay

D

WA-01

202-225-6311

Kennedy, Patrick

D

RI-01

202-225-4911

Larson, John

D

CT-01

202-225-2265

Levin, Sander

D

MI-12

202-225-4961

Lowey, Nita

D

NY-18

202-225-6506

McCollum, Betty

D

MN-04

202-225-6631

McDermott, Jim

D

WA-07

202-225-3106

McMahon, Michael

D

NY-13

202-225-3371

Meek, Kendrick

D

FL-17

202-225-4506

Michaud, Michael

D

ME-02

202-225-6306

Miller, Brad

D

NC-13

202-225-3032

Moore, Gwen

D

WI-04

202-225-4572

Neal, Richard

D

MA-02

202-225-5601

Olver, John

D

MA-01

202-225-5335

Pascrell, Bill Jr.

D

NJ-08

202-225-5751

Pingree, Chellie

D

ME-01

202-225-6116

Price, David

D

NC-04

202-225-1784

Quigley, Mike

D

IL-05

202-225-4061

Rothman, Steven

D

NJ-09

202-225-5061

Schiff, Adam

D

CA-29

202-225-4176

Schwartz, Allyson

D

PA-13

202-225-6111

Sherman, Brad

D

CA-27

202-225-5911

Sires, Albio

D

NJ-13

202-225-7919

Slaughter, Louise McIntosh

D

NY-28

202-225-3615

Smith, Adam

D

WA-09

202-225-8901

Speier, Jackie

D

CA-12

202-225-3531

Sutton, Betty

D

OH-13

2202-25-3401

Tierney, John

D

MA-06

202-225-8020

Tonko, Paul

D

NY-21

202-225-5076

Tsongas, Niki

D

MA-05

202-225-3411

Velazquez, Nydia

D

NY-12

202-225-2361

Watson, Diane

D

CA-33

202-225-7084

Clarke, Yvette

D

NY-11

202-225-6231

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LGBT AND Immigrant Rights Are Civil Rights – Support UAFA AND RFA #aop #immigration

It’s great to see that our Act on Principles website is now “whipping” our legislators’ positions on both the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA)(HR.1024 and S.424) as well as the House version of the Reuniting Families Act (RFA)(HR 2709), which has completely incorporated UAFA.

I have worked on many LGBT and HIV-related immigration issues over the years, including building coalitions among LGBT, HIV/AIDS and immigrant organizations and advocates. All this work means that I strongly believe that the best way to gain full immigration rights for LGBT couples and individuals will be for our LGBT communities, activists and allies to also support fair immigration laws for ALL immigrants and refugees.  It’s not only the right thing to do, it’s the smart thing politically and strategically.

Look how the legislative strategy for UAFA has evolved, reflecting the best in coalition-building among and with our legislative champions and allies.  When Representative Jerry Nadler first introduced the bill (then called the Permanent Partners Act) in 2000, there were very few co-sponsors, no committee hearings and no votes taken.  We should be very grateful to Representative Nadler, Senator Patrick Leahy (the sponsor of bill in the Senate beginning in 2003), Immigration Equality, local LGBT immigrant and bi-national couple organizations, and many, many LGBT couples and activists for being so persistent in their organizing and advocacy over the years.  Representative Nadler has re-introduced his bill in every session of Congress and today, UAFA has 117 co-sponsors in the House and 23 co-sponsors in the Senate.  On June 3, 2009, the Senate Judiciary Committee held the first ever hearing on UAFA and heard compelling testimony about its importance and urgency.

Yet despite all this great work, almost everyone in Congress believes that UAFA as a stand-alone bill is not likely to be enacted any time soon.  Immigration law is extremely complex – as well as controversial – especially in challenging economic times when immigrants are more likely to be scapegoated.  Stand-alone bills to change our immigration laws almost never get enacted; they usually become part of a broader bill, or “comprehensive immigration reform,” as it is now talked about.

So Representative Nadler has worked closely with Representative Mike Honda (and LGBT organizations and advocates) to incorporate all of UAFA (plus some technical improvements related to the definition of a child under immigration law, naturalization and protections for immigrant women facing domestic violence) into a broader bill on family immigration, the Reuniting Families Act (HR 2709).  Representative Honda has been an articulate champion for LGBT couples and families, emphasizing that his bill is intended to secure fair immigration rights for ALL families, including LGBT couples and families.  He has resisted pressure from some otherwise immigrant-supportive organizations from faith communities to drop the UAFA provisions from RFA and stood firmly as an advocate for LGBT couples and individuals.

And look at the impressive and diverse number of groups who have already expressed their public support for RFA – which includes UAFA, and therefore support for LGBT immigration rights:  the NAACP, Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, National Council of La Raza, League of United Latin American Citizens, Asian American Justice Center, Organization of Chinese Americans, Japanese American Citizens League, National Korean American Service and Education Consortium, Southeast Asian Resource Action Center, South Asian Americans Leading Together, American-Arab Discrimination Committee, Arab American Institute, Anti-Defamation League,  American Jewish Committee, Union for Reform Judaism, United Church of Christ, United Methodist Church, Episcopal Church, Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service, and Service Employees International Union.  These are exactly the organizations – and the communities and constituencies they represent – who we as an LGBT movement need to build closer alliances, greater trust and shared successes.

This shared work also highlights that we are part of other communities – that there are LGBT folks in every minority, immigrant, faith, labor and other constituency.  And here we all are now working together on a bill that has brought us together – on both LGBT and broader immigrant rights.

The final strategy step towards enactment will be a “comprehensive immigration reform” bill that will also have to address the much more difficult issues of enforcement, legalization and other reforms.  The more support there is for RFA and UAFA with co-sponsors and others on the public record, the more likely the LGBT provisions become part of any broader immigration bill that moves forward.

One of the equality goals of the Dallas Principles, which inspired this Act on Principles website, is that “Every LGBT person has the right to a family without legal barriers to immigration, civil marriage or raising children.”  To make sure that these immigration bills move forward in Congress, this website now gives all of “something to do” – to “act on principles.”

We can use the public whip counts of UAFA and RFA and update them.  We can get every one of the co-sponsors and supporters of UAFA to now co-sponsor or otherwise publicly support RFA (we also need a version of RFA in the Senate that includes UAFA).

We can reach out to local organizations, advocates and activists in immigrant, minority, faith, labor and other communities and help mobilize their support for RFA and explain why it is so important to include LGBT couples and individuals in a family immigration bill and any comprehensive immigration reform.  We can educate our own LGBT organizations and communities about the broader immigrant issues at stake and why they should be equally strong allies for immigrant rights.

All our work will help build the momentum for broader immigration reform, which will greatly increase the chances of the UAFA provisions ultimately getting enacted.

Act now.  No delay. No excuses.