Dairy farmers, business leaders and Latino tamale makers typically are not political soulmates. On Wednesday, however, they and a cross section of other Minnesotans joined forces in support of new plans to overhaul the nation's immigration system.
"This [reform] is the key ingredient to the development and growth of Minnesota's economy," said Bill Blazer, senior vice president at the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce, which has been working for years to change an immigration system that reform advocates contend makes it nearly impossible for businesses to hire critical foreign workers and for undocumented workers to gain a pathway to citizenship.
It's also a key to stabilizing families and communities, said Uriel Rosales, 23, of Minneapolis, one of several speakers at a Capitol press conference Wednesday announcing a new coalition to support reforms.
"My father was deported when I was a freshman in college," said Rosales. "It was very painful. ... But under the current system, there was no way for him to become legal here. Hopefully the new reforms will help people like him still in the country and people who want to be reunited with their families."
The remarks came in response to immigration-overhaul proposals laid out this week by a bipartisan group of U.S. senators and President Obama. The senators proposed a concrete set of immigration changes, while Obama endorsed broad principles to reshape an immigration system that hasn't had a major overhaul in more than 25 years.
Both call for tougher border enforcement, penalties for employers who hire illegal workers and a pathway to citizenship for foreigners who come here illegally.
The last piece is the thorniest issue. There are about 11 million undocumented workers nationwide and thousands in Minnesota. They should not be rewarded for breaking the law, say opponents of the proposed reforms.
"I don't feel like we owe them anything," said Paul Westrum, founder of the Minnesota Coalition for Immigration Reduction, which he says has 32 chapters statewide that will be working to defeat the measure.