Originally posted on the America’s Voice blog.

Last night President Obama weighed in again on the immigration debate and Arizona’s controversial new law, according to Scott Wilson of the Washington Post:

President Obama told a White House reception Wednesday that he wants “to begin work this year” on comprehensive immigration reform, warning the audience that securing the legislation will be difficult but possible.

Addressing an audience celebrating Cinco de Mayo in the Rose Garden, Obama said, “America’s diversity is America’s strength.” That, he added, is why he has spoken out against Arizona’s recently passed immigration law, which has raised concerns of racial profiling.

“We can’t start singling out people because of who they look like,” he said to applause. “That’s why we have to close the door on this kind of misconceived action by meeting our obligations here in Washington.”

The Arizona law has given more urgency to the push for immigration reform, as have the imperatives of election-year politics.

The President has come under fire from Latino and immigrant advocacy groups in the past weeks and months for a perceived lack of concrete action on his promise to overhaul the nation’s dysfunctional immigration system in a fair way. This is epitomized by mounting criticism against the Administration’s ratcheted-up enforcement policies in the absence of federal reform. Right now there’s no way for undocumented immigrants to get into the system and get legal, and unscrupulous employers continue to be able to exploit workers.

According to the AP:

Latino groups have been calling for Obama to deliver on his campaign promise of making immigration reform a top priority, with some activists and lawmakers in the Congressional Hispanic Caucus complaining he wasn’t doing enough.

Obama clouded the issue last week by saying “there may not be an appetite” in Congress to deal with another hot-button issue immediately after grueling fights over health care and financial regulation.

In fact, these concerns, mixed with outrage over Arizona’s new immigration law, boiled over on Saturday, May 1st. Hundreds of thousands of protesters in over 100 cities across the country took to the streets to peacefully but firmly put their foot down against Arizona’s SB 1070 and stand up for immediate, federal action on immigration. In Washington, D.C., these protests included escalated calls for action. Irish Central characterized Chicago Congressman Luis Gutierrez’ act of civil disobedience at the DC immigration rally a wakeup call for the Administration, in terms of how serious the Latino and immigrant communities are on this issue.

Watch the video of Rep. Gutierrez being arrested in front of thousands of supporters at the White House, to get a sense of the mood:

But it is not just Latino and immigrant communities who think a fair fix to immigration is long overdue.

Keep reading over at the America’s Voice blog.

Categories: Arizona, Civil Disobedience, comprehensive immigration reform

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  • andrea batista

    Yes… “America’s diversity it’s America’s strenght”…and this is a FREE COUNTRY where …”All men are supposed to stand equal before God”.’…”IN GOOD WE TRUST…!!”

  • maria

    Please Congress!!!!!we need an inmigratio reform this year we need to put families together and we have been years over years waiting for the legalization, we want to travel and be able to visit ours families the people that we love and we miss so much, we cry, we feel loneless, we are scared, we want to feel the freedom again, we want to stay in USA because of ours children we want the learn english and have more opportunities this country is the American dream we work hard to build the economy we are strong together!!!!!!

  • Sarai

    I have so much to say about the issue and I’m glad that finally I start to feel like I can talk about this things with friends and neighbors. I think that finally so many of us will start to heal from the anger, fear, shame that we have been keeping. Thanks for having a place like this. It makes me feel and know that I’m not alone. Change is going to come.

  • Andre

    Yes I agree with Maria and all the people, in favor a Inmigration Reform, but please Now, when the Presidente Obama was in campaign promise of making immigration reform a top priority, in his first year, but now is the second year and we don’t see anything..Isn’t possible…There a lot people have 10,15 years in this country, and nothing…please is very important and necessary, because other places like Az, want pass racism law…please is very important right now…
    No es es posible que el Presidente diga una cosa, y despues haga otra, primero digo en su primer periodo ya estamos en el segundo y nada de nada, ahora dice que no ve indicios de que este tiempo vaya a pasar algo entonces de que estamos hablando???? Creo que una vez mas nos usaron con el cuento de una Reforma Migratoria…si es asi, pues entonces tendremos que seguir haciendo desobediencia civil, para hacernos escuchar, ya es tiempo..hasta cuando?????

  • http://firesaw.wordpress.com/2010/05/06/president-obama-arizona-and-immigration-hardball-%c2%ab-reform-immigration-for-america/ President Obama, Arizona, and Immigration Hardball « Reform Immigration For America « Firesaw

    [...] The Arizona law has given more urgency to the push for immigration reform, as have the imperatives of election-year politics. via reformimmigrationforamerica.org [...]

  • Lynn

    Obama keeps teasing you with promises he can not keep. “Reform” has failed many times. The 2007 bill failed during a time of economic growth. Do you really think the Democrats will give legal status to millions of illegal workers while 15 million citizens are unemployed? Do you think the States can afford more entitlements, like food stamps, going to more low income families?
    Go ahead and push for reform this year. What will you do when it FAILS again?

  • taikurd

    ooo, is somebody taunting the indignant for trying? doesn’t matter what time of what year it is; we need a fairer, comprehensive process, and injustice doesn’t stop whining just because the economic climate is “unfavorable.” or inconvenient.