Keeping Obama to
His Word
Rep. Luis
Gutierrez is a hero to many Hispanics. He says he won't change his
methods, no matter who gets irritated.
by Arian
Campo-Flores
Newsweek (November 29,
2010)
Once you've made a
promise to U.S. Rep. Luis Gutierrez, it's a bad idea to break it.
Because if you do, he'll call you on it, and then he'll broadcast
your perfidy incessantly, with every megaphone he can get his hands
on, to anyone who will listen. Just ask President Barack Obama, who
failed to keep his word on tackling immigration reform in his first
year in office. Though the two Chicago Democrats were once close,
Gutierrez has spent much of the past two years badgering the
president on the issue. "He was clear in his commitment to me,"
says Gutierrez. And yet "everything has been enforcement,
enforcement, enforcement"-more deportations of undocumented
immigrants, more troops |on the border. "How," asks Gutierrez, "is
this different from what George W. Bush did?"
Gutierrez, 56, is
the most passionate, tireless, and nettlesome voice in Congress on
immigration matters. He's a constant presence at rallies and on TV,
defending the undocumented and railing against xenophobia. It's no
surprise that a recent Pew Hispanic Center survey ranked him the
second-most-important Latino leader in the country, after Supreme
Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor. "He's as close as the Latino
community has to a Martin Luther King figure," says Frank Sharry,
founder of the pro-immigrant group America's Voice. Yet Gutierrez's
tactics are controversial. While many admire his tenacity and
credit him with keeping immigration reform alive, others, including
members of the Obama administration, believe his confrontational
style can be counterproductive. He sees things more simply. "I have
only one loyalty," he says, "and that's to the immigrant
community."
Gutierrez has now
embarked on his latest campaign: to secure quick passage of the
DREAM Act, which would legalize undocumented youths who attend
college or serve in the military. With a Republican takeover of the
House imminent, the lame-duck session of Congress offers the last
chance (for a while, at least) to get it done. It won't be easy,
given the noxious atmosphere in Washington. Yet Gutierrez has
already launched a nationwide tour of churches to rally immigrants
and their supporters, and has begun rounding up votes in the House.
Two weeks ago, he and a few other lawmakers met with Obama at the
White House. "We want you to put everything you can behind this,"
he says they told the president. Obama agreed to help-by, among
other things, placing personal calls to wavering
lawmakers.
Gutierrez's first
stop on his church tour was St. Brigid's in Brooklyn a week ago.
Joined by Rep. Nydia Vel�zquez, chair of the Congressional Hispanic
Caucus, and other elected officials, he was received with adulation
by the hundreds of people packed in the pews. His speeches at
events like these-delivered in a stentorian voice, despite his
slight physique-resemble revivalist sermons. He started off softly,
then crescendoed to ear-splitting decibels, jabbing his index
finger toward the heavens. "The other side is waiting for us to get
tired!" Gutierrez thundered in Spanish. "Is anyone here tired?"
"No!" the audience roared back.
The son of Puerto
Rican parents, Gutierrez has long had a fiery streak. He was a
student leader and community organizer before entering politics,
first as an alderman and then a congressman representing a
majority-Latino district. Though he's about to start his 10th term,
Gutierrez's activist roots still show. Within weeks of Obama's
taking office, he set off on a 30-city tour to highlight the
stories of families split apart by deportations and to pressure the
administration to take on immigration reform. One year later, with
things at a standstill, Gutierrez turned more adversarial. He said
Hispanics were becoming angry and disillusioned, and were losing
patience with the president. In May of this year, he was arrested
at an immigration protest in front of the White House. The
following month, he threatened to urge Latinos to sit out the
midterm elections if Democrats didn't act on immigration reform.
"In any movement, you need agitators," says Simon Rosenberg,
president of the New Democrat Network, which has pushed for reform.
"I frankly admire him for having the courage to take on friends and
allies."
That sentiment
isn't shared by many in the administration. Gutierrez clashed
repeatedly with Rahm Emanuel, Obama's former chief of staff, whom
he considered a prime impediment to an immigration overhaul.
Another administration official, who didn't want to be named to
avoid exacerbating tensions, complains that Gutierrez "has
contributed to the flawed impression that the president can do this
by himself"-when, in fact, he depends on Congress to move
legislation. "It saddens me ... that [the president] and I have had
these very public differences," says Gutierrez.
It's quite a
turnaround for the two men. When Obama was a freshman U.S. senator,
he used to call Gutierrez regularly for advice. When he decided to
run for president, he sought Gutierrez's endorsement early on-and
got it. "There was a time when I was the only elected Latino that
was for him. They were all for Hillary [Clinton]," says Gutierrez.
"I love him. I want him to do well ... But I have to be true to
what I believe in." (Cecilia Mu�oz, a White House point person on
immigration, calls Gutierrez "an important moral voice" and says
that he and the president "are on the same side of the
issue.")
Outside the
administration, some backers of immigration reform also have
misgivings about Gutierrez's approach. He "transformed what had
been a narrow policy issue into a litmus-test identity issue for
Hispanics, and that made the debate a whole different ball game,"
says Tamar Jacoby, president of ImmigrationWorks USA, a coalition
of business groups that rely on immigrant labor. Gutierrez is
"incredibly effective at what he does ... [But] there's part of me
that always gets a little worried about identity
politics."
Still, Gutierrez
has a track record of pragmatism, too. He took flak from some
advocates for including strict enforcement provisions in an
immigration bill he crafted with Republican Rep. Jeff Flake in 2007
(it didn't pass). "He can go from being a bomb thrower to being a
dealmaker," says Angela Kelley of the Center for American Progress.
"That's a pretty important bilingual ability." Gutierrez's
promotion of the DREAM Act is itself a compromise. Pro-immigrant
forces agonized over whether to abandon the fight for a
comprehensive bill in favor of a narrower one that would benefit
only a slice of the undocumented population. In the end, they
concluded that only the DREAM Act had a real chance.
Gutierrez thinks
the measure can prevail in the House. The bigger challenge is in
the Senate, where Majority Leader Harry Reid has pledged to bring
the bill to the floor in the next few weeks. Given the need for 60
votes to break a filibuster and the likely defection of a handful
of Democrats, the measure's backers need to win over at least a
half dozen Republicans-a tall order these days. But seven current
Senate GOP members voted for the DREAM Act in 2007, and a few
others who are retiring aren't considered hardliners.
The immigrant
movement will face a much more adverse climate in Congress next
year. As a result, Gutierrez is trying to redirect its energy
toward a different end: persuading Obama to use his executive
powers to stop the deportation of law-abiding illegal immigrants.
To ratchet up the pressure, Gutierrez is encouraging acts of
nonviolent civil disobedience. "We cannot be a slave to the
legislative process," he says. "That's what we've done, and it
hasn't served us very well." Given that some Republican lawmakers
have made clear they plan to use their newfound power to crack down
even more on illegal immigrants, "the next couple of years are
going to be an extraordinary battle," says Rosenberg. Gutierrez's
"voice will be needed more than ever." And you can be certain
you'll hear it.