Anyone following the recent coverage of the debate surrounding the inclusion of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender families in immigration reform may be forgiven for wondering if it’s 1993. That was the year Congress was last seen using scare tactics to throw gay Americans under the bus. The argument two decades ago was that gay sailors were incapable of guarding our shores. Today, it is that gay immigrants shouldn’t be allowed to set foot on them. Lawmakers who supported such exclusion were wrong then, and they’re still wrong today.
The Senate’s so-called “Gang of Eight” immigration bill is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to fix our country’s broken immigration system. It gets a lot of things right. A path to citizenship for the 11 million people who have worked hard to build our country is long overdue. So is the DREAM Act for those who are American in every way but needs this act as we need them. Those are critical improvements that help all immigrants, both gay and straight.
The Senate’s good bill, however, can be made better. It should be amended to allow LGBT Americans to sponsor their foreign-born partners for residency, just as straight Americans have always been allowed to do. Families like Ginger and Ness Madeiros, who are facing separation when Ness’ visa expires this summer, just want the same opportunity to prove their family should stay together. The provision, introduced as a stand-alone bill in the Senate by Sens. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, is a common-sense solution that both Republicans and Democrats should be able to support.
Yet some lawmakers are rallying against lesbian and gay families. This makes even less sense than it did in 1993. It is also politically unwise. November’s presidential elections should have been a wake-up call. It appears, however, that some lawmakers didn’t get the memo. Here’s a short recap:
You can’t build a winning coalition without us: America is a diverse country that wants all of its people respected and protected under the law. Calling for deportations—self-inflicted or otherwise—isn’t a winning strategy. President Obama won re-election thanks, in large part, to the Latino community. If the GOP wants to compete in 2014, 2016 and beyond, it must give up the drug of slandering immigrants and LGBT people.









