Clergy have staged quiet vigils at local offices of Minnesota's two U.S. senators and now are focusing on House members. In a Cargill auditorium, the company's chief executive officer joins a town hall meeting via satellite with D.C.'s influential. At a storefront radio station on Lake Street in Minneapolis, a Spanish-speaking activist urges listeners to come out of the shadows.
A rare alliance has emerged on an issue of mutual interest: supporting immigration reform.
"If you can get such strange bedfellows all on the same page for one issue, it's a pretty good indication that the status quo is unacceptable," said John Keller, head of the Minnesota Immigrant Law Center.
As the U.S. Senate begins what promises to be protracted debate over the issue and the House has yet to weigh in, groups with their own vested interests in supporting reform are far from sitting on the sidelines back home.
The groups have separate constituencies and interests. The Minnesota Business and Advocacy Immigration Coalition, which recently met with Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., includes an unlikely collection that includes the Minnesota AFL-CIO, Minnesota Chamber of Commerce, Minnesota Milk Producers Association, Minnesota Council of Churches and the Minnesota Nursing & Landscape Association.
Some guiding principles do unite them: a timely and affordable way for current immigrants and their families to gain a pathway to citizenship, accurate verification status of workers, and a simple and timely approach to the future flow of immigration.
Their methods run from high-tech to old-school.
One recent afternoon, Juve Meza was at the studios of the Spanish language radio station La Invasora in Minneapolis to make the case to the station's listeners that this time, it might be different for them. Meza is a volunteer for a group called Navigate Mn, which helps immigrant students. Meza came to the United States from Mexico at age 15. He said he's seen anti-immigrant sentiment grow in Minnesota and nationwide.