Hillary Clinton supports immigration reform, but that won’t be enough for many in her party. The Democratic presidential candidate has a complicated history with the issue, but she’ll put it front and center when returns Tuesday to Nevada, the third state in the presidential nominating process.
Clinton beat Democratic rival Barack Obama among Latinos by a nearly two-to-one margin in 2008. But some of her more recent comments on immigration have led reform activists to fear the former secretary of state is out-of-step and out-of-date with how the issue has evolved.
Once a Democratic wedge issue, immigration reform now has universal support inside the party. Sensing the momentum, an feisty new generation of activists feels confident to vocalize their disappointment in the Obama White House and demand Clinton go even farther in promising executive action to remake the country’s immigration system with or without Congress.
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They’ll be watching closely Tuesday when Clinton arrives in Nevada for an event focused on immigration reform at a Las Vegas high school. She’ll meet with young DREAM-Act eligible students at the heavily Latino school and discuss reform.
Crucially, in major move, Clinton will call for passing comprehensive immigration reform that provides “nothing less than a full and equal path to citizenship,” according to a campaign official. “She will say that we cannot settle for proposals that provide hard-working people with merely a ‘second-class’ status,” the official added.
Separately, she’ll sit down with a dozen local Latino leaders for a private meeting, BuzzFeed first reported.
The outreach is welcomed, says Ceaser Vargas. He’s the co-director of the DREAM Action Coalition, a group of young undocumented immigrants known for audaciously confronting politicians, which has been sharply critical of Clinton in the past.
When Vargas himself confronted Clinton on a rope line in Iowa last fall, she gave what he told msnbc was the “wrong wrong wrong answer” to a question about whether she supported delaying Obama’s executive action on immigration. Clinton’s answer – that we need to “elect more Democrats” – offended activists frustrated with the Democratic Party.
And it wasn’t the first time she damaged herself among activists. A few months earlier, during the book tour promoting her memoir “Hard Choices,” Clinton said many children showing up at the Southern border needed to be turned away. “We have to send a clear message: just because your child gets across the border doesn’t mean your child gets to stay,” she said at CNN town hall in June.
And during her last presidential bid, an early sign of Clinton’s latent vulnerability came in November 2007 when the then-senator bungled a question on drivers’ licenses for undocumented immigrants during a debate in New York. She gave a rambling non-answer, before her campaign clarified that she opposed the plan.
But Clinton’s 2016 campaign is working hard to win over the doubters. She’s made immigration reform part of one of the “four big fights” of her campaign, and has invested in outreach.
The day Clinton announced her campaign, Vargas’ group was included on a conference call with campaign Chairman John Podesta and Political Director Amanda Renteria. And Renteria, who is Latina, has been working the phones to connect with Hispanic leaders across the country.
But the event Tuesday will be her most visible sign yet that she intends to prioritize the issue and Hispanic voters. Clinton, of course, supports immigration reform, but the question is how far is she willing to go and how much of a priority will she make it?
Frank Sherry, who runs the pro-reform group America’s Voice, said he was surprised – pleasantly – when he heard about her meeting with young people. “It sure feels like she wants to lean into this and show she’s not just for it, but really for it,” he told msnbc.
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