Immigrant Activists End DC Fast, Pass Baton
President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama visit with
individuals who are taking part in Fast for Families on the National
Mall in Washington. About half a dozen Oregon immigrant rights activists
will start a 24-hour fast on Tuesday, Dec. 3, 2013, to protest inaction
in Congress on immigration reform and pressure a local Congressman to
support immigration legislation. The fast is one of several happening in
states throughout the nation in solidarity with the Washington DC
fasters who have drunk only water since Nov. 12 in support of reform.
About half a dozen Congress members, including
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, were there as the fasters left the
tent Tuesday. Minnesota Democratic U.S. Reps. Keith Ellison and Betty
McCollum began one-day solidarity fasts with the activists.
Immigration advocates in a handful of cities around the country also announced their own fasts in solidarity with those in D.C. Nearly a dozen activists in central and South Florida embarked on one-day fasts, as did groups in California and Oregon.
On Tuesday, Maria Rodriguez, head of the Florida Immigrant Coalition in Miami, posted a picture of herself on Twitter with a sign reading "I fast for Immigration Reform In Solidarity with D.C. fasters" and urged others to do the same.
In Bakersfield, Calif., activists kicked off "11 days for 11 million" — a fast referencing the estimated number of people living in the country illegally. In Vista, Calif., immigrant advocates and religious leaders planned a 24-hour fast outside Republican U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa's office. Staff at the nonprofit Coalition for Human Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles also joined a 24 hours liquid fast.
Activists in Bend, Ore., joined the one-day fast, calling on Republican U.S. Rep Greg Walden to come out in support of a comprehensive immigration bill. Organizers of the National Mall protest did not immediately say why Dae Joong Yoon of the National Korean American Services Consortium, Cristian Avila of Mi Familia Vota and Eliseo Medina of the SEIU ended their fast Tuesday. Doctors were on hand to examine them. The three had camped out since Nov. 12 in chilly temperatures, receiving a range of visitors, including President Barack Obama. He stopped by the tent Friday, reiterating optimism that immigration changes will come.
House Speaker John Boehner refuses to schedule a vote on a comprehensive bill the Senate passed in June but has said the House would consider piecemeal legislation. It's unclear if and when the House will take up the smaller bills.
Also on Tuesday, the nonprofit Bend the Arc: A Jewish Partnership for Justice and the Muslim Public Affairs Council organized solidarity fasts with the immigrant advocates. Other new fasters included Rabbi David Saperstein, whom Newsweek called in 2009 the most influential Rabbi in America, as well as Stephan Bauman, the head of World Relief. Also fasting, Chicago native Phillip Agnew, a 2008 graduate and university board trustee of Florida A&M University, a historically black school and Rev. Gabriel Salguero, head of the National Latino Evangelical Coalition.
MIAMI, FLORIDA (ASSOCIATED PRESS) — Three immigrant advocates on a hunger
strike to pressure lawmakers to change the country's immigration system
ended their three-week fast Tuesday on the National Mall, while a new
group of fasters including U.S. Rep. Joseph Kennedy III took their
place.
Immigration advocates in a handful of cities around the country also announced their own fasts in solidarity with those in D.C. Nearly a dozen activists in central and South Florida embarked on one-day fasts, as did groups in California and Oregon.
On Tuesday, Maria Rodriguez, head of the Florida Immigrant Coalition in Miami, posted a picture of herself on Twitter with a sign reading "I fast for Immigration Reform In Solidarity with D.C. fasters" and urged others to do the same.
In Bakersfield, Calif., activists kicked off "11 days for 11 million" — a fast referencing the estimated number of people living in the country illegally. In Vista, Calif., immigrant advocates and religious leaders planned a 24-hour fast outside Republican U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa's office. Staff at the nonprofit Coalition for Human Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles also joined a 24 hours liquid fast.
Activists in Bend, Ore., joined the one-day fast, calling on Republican U.S. Rep Greg Walden to come out in support of a comprehensive immigration bill. Organizers of the National Mall protest did not immediately say why Dae Joong Yoon of the National Korean American Services Consortium, Cristian Avila of Mi Familia Vota and Eliseo Medina of the SEIU ended their fast Tuesday. Doctors were on hand to examine them. The three had camped out since Nov. 12 in chilly temperatures, receiving a range of visitors, including President Barack Obama. He stopped by the tent Friday, reiterating optimism that immigration changes will come.
House Speaker John Boehner refuses to schedule a vote on a comprehensive bill the Senate passed in June but has said the House would consider piecemeal legislation. It's unclear if and when the House will take up the smaller bills.
Also on Tuesday, the nonprofit Bend the Arc: A Jewish Partnership for Justice and the Muslim Public Affairs Council organized solidarity fasts with the immigrant advocates. Other new fasters included Rabbi David Saperstein, whom Newsweek called in 2009 the most influential Rabbi in America, as well as Stephan Bauman, the head of World Relief. Also fasting, Chicago native Phillip Agnew, a 2008 graduate and university board trustee of Florida A&M University, a historically black school and Rev. Gabriel Salguero, head of the National Latino Evangelical Coalition.
Follow Laura Wides-Munoz on twittet: https://twitter.com/lwmunoz
Associated Press writers Amy Taxin in Tustin, Calif., Edwin Tamara in Los Angeles and Gosia Wozniacka in Portland, Ore., contributed to this report.
Associated Press writers Amy Taxin in Tustin, Calif., Edwin Tamara in Los Angeles and Gosia Wozniacka in Portland, Ore., contributed to this report.
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