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Ten Months of Chasing Romney

9:59 am in Uncategorized by DRM Capitol Group Editor

I’ve shaken Romney’s hand three or four times, recorded a priest being manhandled by a member of his congregation at a demonstration and heard stories of children crossing the desert that they watched adults die in. I went from Romney rally to Romney rally in primary states across the country, hearing what GOP primary voters value. I’ve heard the most irrational Teabagger arguments imaginable, video’s I’ve had a hand in have made national news that Mitt Romney has publicly fumbled over at debates and interviews and I’ve been at demonstrations in at least 10 states. It’s been interesting riding shotgun in the DREAMer movement.

Starting in January, I began writing the articles on immigration law, the DREAM Act and demonstrations for DRM Capitol Group, an immigration advocacy firm that I cofounded. Those articles would become the book Chasing Romney, focusing in on his immigration policy and the lives of DREAMers. Staying on the couches of undocumented immigrants, I watched mixed immigration-status families struggle with policies that relate directly to their families, many times separating loved ones or making life unmanageable. I’d often compare this to my own perspective, being one of the whitest kids you’ll ever meet from the Long Island suburbs: you can get my old neighbors fired up on immigration, but it’s always “those illegal immigrants,” caricatures drawn of people who are far away.

Texas is soon expected to become a swing state. This is largely due to the demographic shift of Mexicans coming into Texas. They are completely turned off by anti-immigrant, anti-Latino dog-whistle politics they’ve seen this year despite the Spanish-language ad buys. A good example of this was Erika Andiola, a DREAMer, being put into a headlock during a demonstration by a white male cop with enough muscle and tattoos to be a UFC fighter at a “Latino Outreach” event in San Antonio. Erika was one of a dozen Latinos at the event, even though the entire venue was packed to the rafters. I’ve talked with more than one conservative Latino in Texas saying he can’t vote for anyone who talks like Romney on immigration issues like the DREAM Act and SB 1070.

Arizona, which I’ve heard referred to as “the new Mississippi of racism,” is torn over immigration. The two vocal groups on the issue are aging white retirees moving in as a Western alternative to Florida and young Latinos often fleeing the conditions at the border. Similar to Texas, Arizona is turning into a swing state on immigration issues. SB 1070, an Arizona state law that spawned several similar laws in other states, became a national issue as it was partially struck down by the Supreme Court. SB 1070 was loudly applauded by Romney and most Republicans, condemned by Democrats and, for Latino families, it all went down on Telemundo.

Where a politician stands on SB 1070 and the DREAM Act have become the litmus tests on immigration and, ultimately, with the Latino community. If you ask an angry white guy what SB 1070 is about, they might say something vague about the economy and “those illegals.” If you ask someone in Arizona too brown to be perceived as white, but not so brown as to be black thus finding themselves in a potential Latino swatch on the color wheel what SB 1070 is about, they answer, twice as sure, that it’s about Joe Arpaio’s posse finding an excuse to frisk them.

This primary season, we saw Mitt Romney jump to the right on immigration issues so that he could look more conservative while he hid his more liberal past as Governor. This was best exemplified when Romney claimed that Perry didn’t have a brain because he supported in-state tuition for DREAMers. It’s not difficult to extrapolate from this, as well as many of his other remarkably consistent immigration stances in an inconsistent career, that he will sacrifice Latino issues quickly when the politics demand it.

In following Mitt Romney for 10 months, I’ve learned a lot about politics, immigration and how different people around the United States feel about today’s political issues. The biggest different between the Latino community and angry white men that the Republican Party consists almost entirely of is the immediacy of the issue. Walk around Dallas or Phoenix, both in states the Republicans are starting to lose, and you’ll find a lot of people who know someone who can’t work, can’t drive or is being deported solely because they were brought across the border as a child. For Long Island suburbanites, the DREAM Act is a small part of the broader economic debate that can be won on other sub-issues, and immigration in general isn’t something they think on much unless they’re blaming someone for long lines at the Emergency Room. For a mixed-status community, what to do about DREAMers’ difficult status is a large part of many debates, but not immigration: they all already agree on the DREAM Act.

Originally posted (by myself) at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ryan-campbell/ten-months-of-chasing-romney_b_1931052.html

DRM Capitol Group in Mississippi

10:42 am in Uncategorized by DRM Capitol Group Editor

My shirt was sticky with sweat, as were most of the other shirts I spied around me.  This included the shirts of 3 guys with microphone recorders, 3 large professional cameras, 2 smaller amateurish cameras and no less than 2 pretty women with microphones, heels digging deep into the dirt, being followed around by a guy with a large camera on his shoulder.  It was Mississippi, a notoriously sticky place, and we were all in the sun on some grass, across the street from a country club.  There were signs and chanting, which quickly turned into one DREAMer feeling like she was going to pass out in the heat.   We were on a small, green hill, surrounded by roaring highway.  Across the street, Romney’s latest country club fundraiser was being held.

A reporter for the SF Enquirer once told me that to make local news, you need to do something different.  For example, a pro-immigration rally doesn’t garner much press in San Fran, however, the Westboro Baptist Church coming to town will get every camera from FOX News’ best to iPhones to colonoscopes.  This may be why we were able do draw so many cameras, while an occasional redneck driving by flipped us off, screaming obscenities which I imagine are common in Mississippi.

While Willard was inside charming a few million out of Fifi, Miffy, Lexus and anyone else who has either owned or purchased a chihuahua damned to spend its life in a purse, DRM and local DREAMers were outside demonstrating.  We were on the opposite end of the street, but the chasm was obvious: it was a bunch of undocumented immigrants standing opposite a country club full of rich white people.  One of the demonstrators, Jacky, helps to give a stark contrast about the characters on each side that is often neglected at the debate.

Jacky was brought to the U.S. from El Salvador as a child, and is, having just turned 18, working in a restaurant to support herself and living on her own while trying to save a little for college.  With the death of her aunt, she’s been on her own now for the past year, and will be moving back to Alabama for a job and inexpensive place to live.  Ask her what’s fun to do in Mississippi and she’ll tell you she has no clue, she’s working all the time.

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