Many Republicans - including Senator Marco Rubio who I do not like and consider a hypocrite - and the child rapist protectors of Roman Catholic Church hierarchy have indicated that they will do all in their power to kill substantive immigration reform if it includes provisions giving same sex bi-national couples the same protections and benefits as those afforded to heterosexual couples. For the Republicans, if gays are included in the bill, it will provide a convenient smoke screen to avoid admitting that today's GOP is racist and strongly anti-Hispanic. Nonetheless, Senator Patrick Leahy has introduced amendments to the "gang of eight" immigration bill. BuzzFeed has details on Leahy's amendments. Here are some highlights:
WASHINGTON — Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy has submitted two amendments to the "Gang of Eight" senators' immigration bill that would extend to same-sex couples to similar immigration rights as opposite-sex married couples.It truly is far past time that religious based bigotry and discrimination be removed from the nation's civil laws. Indeed, religion needs to be removed entirely from public policy and public discourse. It needs to be confined to the inside of houses of worship and believers' private homes.
"For immigration reform to be truly comprehensive, it must include protections for all families," Leahy said in a statement. "We must end the discrimination that gay and lesbian families face in our immigration law."
Amendments on the bill were due to be submitted by 5 p.m. Tuesday. The Judiciary Committee is scheduled to begin considering the bill and amendments on Thursday morning.
Leahy's moves Tuesday included an unexpected amendment that would provide recognition to same-sex couples who are legally married for immigrations purposes — an effort praised as "brilliant" by the Human Rights Campaign.
Because the Defense of Marriage Act bars the federal government from recognizing same-sex couples' marriages, binational gay and lesbian couples — those where one partner is not a U.S. citizen — have been denied the ability to seek a green card that straight couples have been eligible to obtain for their spouse in a similar situation.
Among Leahy's amendments is one that would include the Uniting American Families Act — a bill that would create a new category of "permanent partners" to enable a U.S. citizen in a same-sex couple to sponsor a foreign partner — in the larger immigration reform legislation. This amendment had been discussed and was expected to be filed.
A second amendment, according to a news release from Leahy's office, "provides equal protection to lawfully married bi-national same sex couples that other spouses receive under existing immigration law." The provision asserts that a person would be considered a married spouse under the Immigration and Nationality Act if the marriage "is valid in the state in which the marriage was entered into" or, if "entered into outside of any state," was valid where entered into and would be valid in a state.
Lavi Soloway, an immigration rights lawyer who represents same-sex couples and co-founded The DOMA Project, told BuzzFeed the second amendment was "nothing short of a strategic master stroke."
Sen. Marco Rubio, one of the Gang of Eight, reiterated earlier Tuesday his statement that inclusion of same-sex couples in the bill "will ensure that it fails."
It was not immediately clear if Rubio would have the same position regarding the second amendment, as he also said Tuesday, "I understand this is an issue that's moving across the country and different states are dealing with it differently. I understand all that, I do."
Human Rights Campaign vice president Fred Sainz echoed Soloway, telling BuzzFeed Tuesday evening, "I think it's brilliant." Explaining, he continued, "This is basically meant to ferret out the Republicans. If you believe in a federalism concept, then I love this because it really narrows, and makes more circumspect, the objections. It's hard to object to marriage, if they're already married. If you're not creating a whole other category of 'permanent partners,' then the objection, on their part, is much more difficult. I think it's a game-changer."
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