Thursday, March 13, 2014

Should Immediate Family Members of our Military/Veterans be granted Legal Status if here Illegally?

Immigration reform may be stalled in Congress, but a new Obama administration policy is extending legal status and military benefits to thousands of illegal immigrants who are the spouses, parents and children of American military members. 
Supporters say the policy -- which applies to active-duty military, reservists and veterans -- is long overdue.
"Those veterans and those men and women who serve in the National Guard certainly deserve the peace of mind that their family members will not be deported," immigration attorney Faye Kolly said. 
But critics say the policy is tantamount to backdoor amnesty. 
"A whole class of aliens with no right to be in the United States are suddenly going to be allowed to live and work here on the basis of their relationship with military and veterans," said Dan Cadman, with the Center for Immigration Studies.
The exemption, called parole in place, came in the form of a U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services "policy memorandum." It was not submitted to or approved by Congress, and the regulations were not published in the Federal Register, which allows for public comment prior to a rule taking effect.
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2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Spouse yes, kids yes. Parents, anyone else, no. Of course if someone serves in the military, their family should be able to become citizens.

-Martha

Anonymous said...

I don't see why not if it's the immediate family if they served in the American army , then they deserve to have there family with them here ...
AD