Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Following up on the survey

Jason,

The team emailed yesterday asking for you to fill out our one-minute survey. Now I'm following up because I want to make sure everyone has a chance to share their thoughts before Amy and I take a look at the results. Thousands of you have already taken the time to let us know what issues are most important to you and how you plan to get involved in the next election.

Thanks to those of you who've done so already.

Take the survey »

I've found that the best way to learn is to listen to everyone. To have open discussions regardless of any of the differences that might otherwise divide us. To open ourselves up to different perspectives. And to ask questions so I can understand what's on your mind, where you want our country to go, the ideas you have for getting it there.

So please take a second to fill out the survey before the end of the day. We're looking forward to hearing your thoughts.

Beto






 

Monday, February 25, 2019

quick favor [Beto’s Survey]

Jason,

As many of you know, Beto and Amy have been looking at ways they can best serve our country going forward. To see what role they can play in uniting a country that's as divided as we've ever seen it.

But these decisions deserve careful thinking, which is why Beto has been asking important questions and taking plenty of time to listen. He has been on the road to visit states across the country, holding meetings with students, and trying to listen to as many people as possible so he can gain their perspective, learn from their experiences, and get the benefit of their wisdom.

As part of this process, we need to hear from you and all of the people who supported our campaign for Senate in Texas. You uniquely know Beto and you know our grassroots campaign, what we fought for, the positive, inclusive, ambitious way we fought for it. With that understanding, you have the best perspective on this. If you'll take just a second to tell us your thoughts on the issues that are most important to you, it would mean the world to Beto.

Take the survey »

Beto wants to make sure that he's listening to everyone — not just those that he knows in El Paso and in Texas. Everyone. Especially the people from places that are forgotten or overlooked. The towns that have not been visited enough, or are only thought about when it comes to election time.

Amy and Beto are making decisions about next steps. But before they do that, we really need to hear from all of you reading these emails -- to learn about what matters most to you.

Thank you for sharing your thoughts with us today. We'll get them over to Beto and Amy.

-Team Beto






 

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Rewind to 1907

Jason,

The proudest achievement in El Paso history occurred in 1966 when the Texas Western College Miners defeated the Kentucky Wildcats in the Men's NCAA Basketball Championship Game. It's one of the great Cinderella stories in sports history — a team of unlikely heroes who captured the country's imagination and changed the course of collegiate athletics forever.


Nevil Shed supporting Willie Worsley

It was an amazing team, one of the best that ever played. But in addition to Don Haskins' gifts as a coach and the genius of Bobby Joe Hill and David Lattin on the court, their victory was in part the result of a larger struggle to ensure the dignity of every man and woman in this country.

Rewind to 1907.

In that year a young man named Lawrence Nixon was practicing medicine in Cameron, Texas. Given the extreme, organized brutality towards African Americans in Texas and the former Confederacy, and the many obstacles placed in his path, it was an achievement of his persistence and determination that he was able to earn an education at all — first at Wiley and then medical school in Nashville before returning to Texas to practice medicine.

But he knew that his achievement and persistence in no way guaranteed his safety or his rights. In a reminder of the extreme danger that African Americans faced in Texas, in November of that same year, 500 members of the Cameron community stormed the county jail and lynched an African American man named Alex Johnson.

Concerned by Johnson's public murder and the number of lynchings occurring across central and east Texas, and perhaps fearing for his own life, Nixon moved west to El Paso where he became involved with civil rights work in addition to his medical career.

In 1914 he helped organize the first chapter of the NAACP in the state of Texas. And in 1924, after Texas passed a law barring African Americans from participating in the all-important Democratic primary (in a state where the Republican party existed in name only), Dr. Nixon took his poll tax into the nearest polling location on election day knowing full well he would be refused the right to vote. Turned away on the basis of his race, he immediately mounted a challenge to the all-white primary — taking his case to the U.S. Supreme Court, twice.


Lawrence Aaron Nixon and his wife Drusilla

Ultimately, he won.

In 1944, 20 years after his first unsuccessful effort to vote, Dr. Nixon walked into the same polling location that had turned him away in 1924 and cast his vote as a Texan, as an American, as a man.

Perhaps Thelma White was thinking about Dr. Nixon in 1955. She had just graduated from the all-black Douglass high school, and though she knew about the segregation clause in the Texas constitution, she nonetheless attempted to enroll at Texas Western College in El Paso. Denied entry based on the color of her skin, she enlisted the help of the NAACP and attorney Thurgood Marshall and took her case to the federal bench of R.E. Thomason.


Thelma White

Judge Thomason, perhaps persuaded both by the arguments of White's legal team and by the extraordinary courage she demonstrated in defying legal segregation, issued a ruling that not only integrated Texas Western College but forever ended Texas' segregation in public higher education.

This victory was quickly followed that same year by the El Paso school district becoming the first ISD in the state of Texas to integrate its public K-12 schools.

Then in 1957, El Paso achieved the distinction of becoming the first major American city to be led by a Mexican-American mayor when Raymond Telles was elected. He overcame decades of discrimination and in the process ensured that all El Pasoans knew that they could serve in positions of trust and power.

That was followed by El Paso city alderman Bert Williams passing one of the first ordinances in the former Confederacy to bar segregation in places of public accommodation after his friend Nolan Richardson was refused service at the Oasis restaurant in 1962 on the basis of his skin color.


Bert Williams and Nolan Richardson

From Nixon to White to Telles to Williams, El Paso was helping to lead the country in ensuring that we actually lived the idea that "all men are created equal." That there was justice for all.

And so, back to the 1966 Miners.

In the years leading up to '66, as Coach Haskins was building the team that would win the National Championship, he was often faced with skepticism from African American prospects who wanted to play for him but didn't want to live in a city where they'd have to sit at the back of the bus, or drink from a separate water fountain or be treated differently based on the color of their skin.

Thanks to the civil rights pioneers who had made their stand in El Paso, he was able to tell them that this was a city that would welcome their genius and their talent without respect to their race. El Paso would see them and treat them as Americans.

With greats like Nolan Richardson and Jim "Bad News" Barnes, Texas Western became a destination for talent from across the country. By 1966, Haskins had the best team in the country, which happened to proudly start five African Americans on the court.

Against the odds, against a powerhouse like Kentucky, against the entrenched racism of the country and collegiate athletics (which had never seen an all-black starting five in a championship game), Texas Western — which had only twelve years before admitted its first African American student — won the national championship, bringing glory, honor and distinction to El Paso, to Texas (where to this day, El Paso remains the only city in Texas to produce a men's championship team) and to this country. That team changed college athletics forever — speeding integration in sports and allowing talent to thrive throughout the country.

Though he died two weeks before the championship game was played, Lawrence Nixon was in some way responsible for the victory that took place. As were Thelma White, Bert Williams, Nolan Richardson and so many more. It was a triumph not just of athletics and coaching, but one also of opportunity, civil rights and democracy.

The 1966 victory is a reminder that our greatest achievements flow from ensuring the greatest opportunity for all. It is a reminder of what can happen when we confront injustice where we find it. It can speed the country's journey towards equality and justice. And it can have an impact far beyond the life of the hero who makes her stand

It's a great reminder given the times we live in and the injustices we see today in America. We need equity in education where we must confront and change a school to prison pipeline where students of color are five times more likely to be suspended than their white peers. We must address an inequity in health care, where a maternal mortality crisis impacts black mothers at two to three times the rate of white mothers. We must make institutional changes to our criminal justice system where we see arrest and sentencing disparities that help explain why one in four black children have had a parent in the criminal justice system, compared to just four percent of white children. We must ensure the economy really works for all, to address unconscionable wealth and income disparities that allow access to opportunity for some over others. We must work towards solutions that make housing, transportation, the workforce, and higher education more equitable.

And, as Dr. Nixon would remind us — to get any of this done, we need to make sure everyone has access to the ballot box. End racial and ethnic gerrymandering, stop voter I.D. laws that seek to suppress voters of color and make sure everyone can add their voice and their vote to this great democracy.

Black History Month, El Paso's history, and the civil rights heroes of our communities remind us that all of this is possible but only if all of us make it happen. It's the courage of people like Nixon, White, Richardson, Telles and Williams who can bring us out of our complacency, awaken our conscience and our duty to eachother, and ultimately force people in positions of public trust to make the important decisions on our behalf.

Courage makes victory possible.

- Beto

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Saturday, February 23, 2019

Sharing exciting news with you

Jason,

The community came together on Tuesday to celebrate this year's El Pasoan of the Year awardee -- someone who went above and beyond in making the city proud and who helped to showcase what makes this place so incredibly amazing.

We're excited to share with you that this year's award winner is Beto! 

Beto spoke about how El Paso made him who he is today and thanked the community for always coming together to meet the challenges we face as a city, state, and country. Read more about Beto being honored as El Pasoan of the Year, and then share this great news with your friends and family.

Thanks for helping us to congratulate Beto!

-Team Beto

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Friday, February 22, 2019

Just like old times

Jason,

It was like old times. 

Last weekend Chris, Cynthia and I were in a rental car driving from town to town, meeting new people, eating fast food and learning the stories that inspire and move us forward.

Only this time, outside of Texas.

I had been invited to speak to the U.S. Hispanic Leadership Institute (USHLI) in Chicago. A huge honor, and I was excited to meet the thousands of young people who were there to share their vision for the future of the country. But, not having spent much time in the Midwest, I was also interested in going to places I hadn't been before.

Friday, we drove from Chicago to Milwaukee and spent time with about 20 students from the Milwaukee Area Technical College (MATC). The conversation was powerful — we talked about anything that any student wanted to raise, very often in personal terms. 

One man shared with us his challenge with opioid addiction and recovery. A young mother talked about raising her 10-year old daughter and attending school at the same time. She shared that she was having a hard time getting a job, "not even at a Starbucks!" because of a prior conviction on her record. Another man pursuing software programming talked about what it was like to lose a good friend to gun violence. 

In these — and in so many other stories I heard — I learned about how tough circumstances didn't have to define opportunity and possibility. It became clear just how crucial the access to a great education at MATC was to their ability to transcend obstacles and overcome challenges in their lives. 

After the formal part of the meeting, I talked to a man who was starting his second business. We talked about next steps, including access to capital and attracting and retaining the talent necessary to ensure this next venture did even better than the first. This then led to a conversation with the woman standing next to him, who is starting a career as a recording engineer, explaining to me how difficult it is to break into the industry in Chicago. So she's going to invest the time at MATC and her talent in Milwaukee to make it big at home. 

Everyone talked about how transformational MATC was for them and what it meant for the larger community, where 35,000 attend one of the four MATC campuses. 

I left impressed, ever more convinced of the extraordinary value of community and technical colleges. 

From Milwaukee we drove to Madison, the sun beginning to set as we pulled into town. Coming from El Paso, it's so amazing and unusual and beautiful to see the frozen ponds and lakes with people skating, playing hockey, just having fun outside. The snow banked up on the side of the road so you feel like you're driving through tunnels at times.

We were met by Eliana and Isaac, students who organized a town-hall style conversation. We had the good problem of more students than chairs so we were able to broadcast the meeting to a couple of overflow rooms on campus.

The conversation was intense and wide-ranging. Climate. Health care. Middle East. Economy. Democracy. On this point, everything seemed to come together for me. Because it's hard to see how we address any of the super huge challenges before us — like keeping the planet from warming another 1.5 degrees Celsius — without a fully engaged, informed democracy. We need the genius, talent and participation of everyone, especially young people. 

So we talked about removing the barriers to participation — voter I.D. Laws, gerrymandering, PACs and Super PACs, the electoral college, etc — and reminded ourselves of the responsibility to own this democracy together. To find common cause and common purpose, to remind ourselves that we are the government, to act as though the future depends on us, because it does.

We stayed to talk individually, take pictures, learn some of the secrets of Wisconsin. Where can I get cheese curds?

An hour later we were in Edgerton at the largest Culver's in the world. With help from Bella who took our order, I left with a bag of cheese curds, crinkle-cut fries, cheddar dipping sauce and a chocolate malt. Luckily I had brought some lactaid with me from El Paso.\

The next day I had the chance to join thousands of young people from across the country at the USHLI convention — the motto was "Defend Democracy: Aquí y Ahora."

Got to listen to a lot of great speakers, from Mayor Yulin from San Juan, to Rep. Celina Villanueva, to Congresswoman Deb Haaland to USHLI president Dr. Juan Andrade, and most special of all I got to spend some time talking with Dolores Huerta. 

I had an opportunity to address the audience, choosing to speak about El Paso's story and the U.S.-Mexico border. The civil rights stands that we are making today that are inspired by the great civil rights victories of the generations before ours. 

And how, whether back then or today, those civil rights struggles are almost always led by the youngest Americans. They are the ones who galvanize public opinion, command the conscience of the country, and ultimately force people in positions of public trust to make the important decisions on our behalf. Whether it was the Civil Rights and Voting Rights Acts of more than 50 years ago — or the effort to end family separation, close down the Tornillo children's detention camp or free Dreamers from fear of deportation today —— the politicians may get credit, but it is the young who ensure the change happens.

We had time to stay around for a while afterwords, catch up with friends we've met along the way (go Oklahoma Panhandle State Aggies!), meet new ones, and then drive back to the airport to catch a plane to El Paso.

A short trip, but an inspiring one for me — lots of good people out there, doing amazing work and ensuring this country lives up to its promise. Thanks to everyone who took the time to say hello and welcome us!

Gracias,

Beto

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Thursday, February 21, 2019

What Beto did over the weekend

Jason,

Beto hit the road over the weekend to visit communities across the midwest and once again hear what's on the minds of people throughout the country. The highlight of the trip was having the opportunity to meet with hundreds of students at Milwaukee Area Technical College and the University of Wisconsin in Madison.

Beto also had the chance to speak with various news outlets along the way, and we wanted to share five of our favorite articles with you:

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Beto O'Rourke Visits Students at MATC [Photos]

Former U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke of Texas greeted students at Milwaukee Area Technical College during a visit to Wisconsin. He listened to MATC students talk about their concerns for getting jobs after graduation and spoke about inequitable wealth distribution, free tuition, gun safety and the environment. Read here >>

The Badger Herald: At UW Visit Beto O'Rourke Discusses Youth Engagement, Immigration, 2020

O'Rourke went on to say that he wants to listen to everyone, particularly student voices, because that is what will help him determine how to best help the country. The event was so well attended that overflow rooms were provided for students unable to get tickets. O'Rourke greeted and took a photo with every student in attendance, including those in the overflow rooms. Read here >>

Fox-6 News: 'Take the Time to Learn:' Beto O'Rourke Visits Milwaukee, Madison While Debating Presidential Run

The stop was part of his cross-country listening tour, meeting with students and different communities in an effort to help decide whether or not to run for president. "I want to find out how they're going to make America a better place," said O'Rourke. "And I want to take my inspiration, direction and guidance from them." From reducing gun violence to fighting the opioid epidemic, students at MATC met with O'Rourke to offer their thoughts on a number of issues concerning them. Read here >>

Wisconsin Public Radio: In National Tour of Colleges, Beto O'Rourke Visits MATC in Milwaukee

The former congressman from Texas spent more than an hour with MATC students in downtown Milwaukee talking about topics ranging from gun control to opioid abuse before meeting with members of the media. O'Rourke said he wanted to learn more about the role of technical colleges in communities. He said he also wanted to gain a better perspective on what it's like to live in, work in, learn in, grow up in and raise a family in the Milwaukee area. He said being at MATC was "very powerful."  Read here >>

Telemundo Wisconsin: Beto O'Rourke en gira por medio oeste mientras piensa posible candidatura presidencial

"Quiero entender las historias de gente que viven aquí en Milwaukee, otras partes del país para conocer las quejas, oportunidades, ideas para el futuro de los estados unidos." Beto dice que es un momento en la política emocionante. Añadiendo que aunque tendremos algunos retos a lo largo del camino, que valen la pena para asegurar un mejor futuro para todos. Leer aqui >>

Thanks for keeping up with Beto's road trip and sharing these great headlines.

Talk soon,

Team Beto






 

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Beto’s big speech

Jason,

President Trump traveled to Beto's hometown last week to spread fear and lies about immigrants and the border.

The people of El Paso had something different in mind. More than 10,000 of us gathered together in a massive celebration of truth, unity, and this beautiful binational community in the face of the President's falsehoods and attempts to divide us. The people of El Paso marched, played music, and rallied to tell the story of El Paso, one of the safest and most vibrant cities in the country – not in spite of but because it's a city of immigrants. Beto took the stage at the rally and delivered an unforgettable speech. We wanted to make sure you didn't miss it.

Watch Beto fire up a crowd by telling the real story of our border communities. Then share this video with friends.

Watch Beto's speech in El Paso

Watch Beto ▷

In times of fear and division, it's important for us to share our stories and tell the truth about life on the border. El Paso coming together by the thousands for an inspiring, hopeful celebration of unity was exactly the example America needed at this moment.

Thanks for helping us to make sure everyone sees it.

- Team Beto






 

Saturday, February 16, 2019

The President came to El Paso

Jason,

The President came to El Paso this week. He promised a wall and repeated his lies about the dangers that immigrants pose. With El Paso as the backdrop, he claimed that this city of immigrants was dangerous before a border fence was built here in 2008.

Beyond refuting his comments about border communities like ours (El Paso was one of the safest communities in the United States before the fence was built here), about walls saving lives (in fact, walls push desperate families to cross in ever more hostile terrain, ensuring greater suffering and death), and about immigrants (who commit crimes at a lower rate than those Americans born here), it's worth thinking about how we got to this place. How it came to be that 11 million undocumented immigrants call America home, how we came to militarize our border, how we arrived at such a disconnect between our ideals, our values, the reality of our lives — and the policies and political rhetoric that govern immigration and border security.


El Paso Times, 2003

I've come to the conclusion that the challenges we face are largely of our own design — a function of the unintended consequences of immigration policy and the rhetoric we've used to describe immigrants and the border. At almost every step of modern immigration policy and immigration politics, we have exacerbated underlying problems and made things worse. Sometimes with the best of intentions, sometimes with the most cynical exploitation of nativism and fear. Much of the history of immigration policy (and the source for the graphs that I'm using) is powerfully summarized in a report entitled "Unintended Consequences of U.S. Immigration Policy: Explaining the Post-1965 Surge from Latin America" by Douglas S Massey and Karen A. Pren.

In 1965, the U.S. ended the bracero farmworker program in part because of the substandard wages and conditions in which these Mexican workers labored. And yet, after decades of employing this labor, with our economy dependent on the laborers and the laborers dependent on access to the U.S. job market, the system of low-cost Mexican labor didn't go away. Many of the same Mexican nationals returned to the U.S., returned to the same back-breaking jobs, only now they were undocumented. Ironically, despite the intent of the 1965 law ending the program, they enjoyed fewer protections and wage guarantees in the shadows as they continued to play a fundamental role in our economy.

As this same population converted from being documented to undocumented a wave of scary metaphors was employed to gin up anxiety and paranoia and political will to employ ever more repressive policies to deter their entry. It was good for politicians and newspapers, terrible for immigrants and immigration policy. Thus began the "Latino threat" narrative. As Massey and Pren write:

"The most common negative framing depicted immigration as a "crisis" for the nation. Initially marine metaphors were used to dramatize the crisis, with Latino immigration being labeled a "rising tide" or a "tidal wave" that was poised to "inundate" the United States and "drown" its culture while "flooding" American society with unwanted foreigners (Santa Ana 2002). Over time, marine metaphors increasingly gave way to martial imagery, with illegal immigration being depicted as an "invasion" in which "outgunned" Border Patrol agents sought to "hold the line" in a vain attempt to "defend" the border against "attacks" from "alien invaders" who launched "banzai charges" to overwhelm American defenses (Nevins 2001; Chavez 2008)."

The fear stoked by politicians produced the intended paranoia and political constituency demanding ever tougher immigration measures. The result of this was not to stop undocumented immigration. Instead it caused the number of undocumented immigrants in the United States to grow.

Here's why: as we made it harder for people to cross into the United States, we made it less likely that once here they would attempt to go back to their home country. Fearing an increasingly militarized border, circular patterns of migration became linear, with immigrants choosing to remain in the U.S., many of them ultimately joined by family members from their home country.

This government-created condition continued to feed on itself:

The "sustained, accelerating accumulation of anti-immigrant legislation and enforcement operations produced a massive increase in border apprehensions after the late 1970s, when the underlying flow of migrants had actually leveled off. For any given number of undocumented entry attempts, more restrictive legislation and more stringent enforcement operations generate more apprehensions, which politicians and bureaucrats can then use to inflame public opinion, which leads to more conservatism and voter demands for even stricter laws and more enforcement operations, which generates more apprehensions, thus bringing the process full circle. In short, the rise of illegal migration, its framing as a threat to the nation, and the resulting conservative reaction set off a self-feeding chain reaction of enforcement that generated more apprehensions even though the flow of undocumented migrants had stabilized in the late 1970s and actually dropped during the late 1980s and early 1990s."

This would only get worse.


El Paso Herald Post 1981 — source Patrick Timmons

After terror attacks in the 1990s and in 2001, the Mexican immigrant was a ready scapegoat for politicians, and the intensity and brutality of enforcement and deterrence measures increased. In the face of terrorism that originated in Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia, the United States chose to conflate the war on terror with immigration from Mexico and Latin America.

With the passage of the Patriot Act in 2001 the number of deportations skyrocketed, with nearly 400,000 sent back to their country of origin in 2009 alone. Not one of the 9/11 terrorists entered through Mexico — and yet Mexicans bore the brunt of this country's immigration response to the terror attacks. Last year, the State Department's Bureau of Counterterrorism found that "there are no known international terrorist organizations operating in Mexico, no evidence that any terrorist group has targeted U.S. citizens in Mexican territory, and no credible information that any member of a terrorist group has traveled through Mexico to gain access to the United States." This year's report found much the same: "there was no credible evidence indicating that international terrorist groups have established bases in Mexico, worked with Mexican drug cartels, or sent operatives via Mexico into the United States."

In addition, walls and fences authorized by the Secure Fence Act of 2006 pushed migration flows to ever more treacherous stretches of the U.S.-Mexico border. More than 4,500 human beings died crossing the border from 2006 to 2017. Far too many of them children.

In recent years, as Mexican migration slowed and then reversed (more Mexican nationals going south to Mexico than coming north to the United States), and as total undocumented immigration reached its lowest levels in modern history, the country was met with the challenge of tens of thousands of Central American families fleeing violence and brutality to petition for asylum in our country.

This too is an unintended consequence. Our involvement in the civil wars and domestic politics of Central American countries, in addition to our ability to consume more illegal drugs than any other country on the planet while leading a military- and law enforcement-first drug control policy, has helped to destroy the institutions of civil society necessary for those countries to function. They can no longer protect their citizens, and their citizens are coming to us.

And how do we meet this challenge? The President, using the same racist, inflammatory rhetoric of years past, seeks to build a wall, to take kids from their parents, to deploy the United States Army on American soil, to continue mass deportations and to end the protection for Dreamers. In other words, he seeks in one administration to repeat all the mistakes of the last half-century. And with past as prologue, we know exactly how that will end.

Not only will it lead to thousands of Americans losing their farms and ranches and homes through eminent domain to build a wall despite the fact that we have the lowest level of northbound apprehensions in my lifetime; it will lead to greater suffering and death for immigrants who are pushed to more dangerous points of crossing; it will fail to meet the legitimate challenge of illegal drugs that are brought to this country (the vast majority crossed at ports of entry); it will further erode our humanity and our standing in the world; and it will not do a single thing to reduce the number of undocumented immigrants and asylum seekers coming to this country.

But we still have a choice. In this democracy, if in fact the people are the government, and the government is the people, we still have a chance to prove it.

We can decide that we'll get past the lies and fear, focus on the facts and human lives in our midst, and do the right thing. The end goal is a stronger, safer, more successful country. Critical to achieving that goal is having immigration, security and bilateral policies that match reality and our values.

  1. Extend citizenship to the more than one million Dreamers in this country. Not only those who are in our classrooms but those who are teaching in our classrooms; those who are keeping our country safe around the world tonight; those who contribute more to our communities than they'll ever take.
  2. Give permanent legal protection and a path to citizenship to their parents, the original Dreamers.
  3. Bring millions more out of the shadows and on a path to citizenship by ensuring that they register with the government and gain status to legally work, pay taxes and contribute even more to our country's success.
  4. Make us safer and more secure. Significantly reduce illegal drug trafficking and stop human trafficking by investing in infrastructure, technology and personnel at our ports of entry. The ports that connect us with Mexico are where the vast majority of everything and everyone that ever comes into our country crosses.
  5. Increase the visa caps so that we match our opportunities and needs (for work, for education, for investment, for innovation, for family reunification) to the number of people we allow into this country. Ensure that those who want to work in jobs that we can't fill can legally come here and legally return to their home country.
  6. Fully accept our opportunity and responsibility under our asylum laws to welcome those whose own governments can no longer protect them — including women fleeing abusive relationships.
  7. Address visa overstays (which accounts for the majority of undocumented immigration) through better tracking of and notification to visa holders (a first step could be text message reminders) and fully harmonizing our entry-exit systems with Mexico and Canada (when a visa holder exits the U.S. and enters Mexico, we will then know that they have left the U.S.; currently, if they leave through a land port of entry we literally have no clue if they are still here or have returned to their country of origin).
  8. Make Latin America and specifically Central America a top foreign policy priority — stop relegating it to second-tier status — invest the time, talent and resources to assist in the development of the domestic institutions that will allow these countries to thrive and offer their citizens protection and economic opportunity. It is the only long-term solution to the number of asylum seekers and refugees coming to this country.
  9. End the global war on drugs. An imprisonment- and interdiction-first approach has not worked, has accelerated the erosion of civil society in much of Latin America and has militarized a public health issue to the detriment of all concerned.
  10. Speak with respect and dignity when referring to our fellow human beings who happen to be immigrants and asylum seekers, who in so many cases are doing exactly what we would do if presented with the same threats and opportunities. No more "invasions", "animals", "rapists and criminals", "floods", "crisis" — dehumanizing rhetoric leads to dehumanizing policies. We cannot sacrifice our humanity in the name of security — or we risk losing both.

This week, we welcomed the President to one of the safest cities in the United States. Safe not because of walls, and not in spite of the fact that we are a city of immigrants. Safe because we are a city of immigrants and because we treat each other with dignity and respect. A city that has the opportunity to lead on the most important issues before us, out of experience, out of compassion and out of a fierce determination to see this country live its ideals and rise to its full potential.


El Paso — Juárez

We can learn from the errors of our past, have the courage to do what's right while we still have the chance, and ensure that the President doesn't commit this country to making mistakes from which we may never recover.

It's up to us.

Beto