An immigrant who fought for DACA says she’s being denied DACA because she fought for DACA
LOS ANGELES—A young activist who spent the past decade fighting for immigrant rights is now being denied the same rights she helped to secure for others.
Lizbeth Mateo was born in Mexico but grew up in Venice, California, near the famous boardwalk. Soon after graduating high school she started collecting signatures on the boardwalk for a petition urging then-President George W. Bush to support the DREAM Act.
A few years later, in 2010, she became one of the first undocumented immigrant rights activists to get arrested for DREAM Act protests when she refused to leave Arizona Senator John McCain’s office.
“We need to call attention to the almost two million families who have been separated” — Lizbeth Mateo
That was thought to be one of the first acts of civil disobedience by undocumented young people in the United States. But it wouldn’t be Mateo’s last.
Mateo’s organizing was part of a groundswell that ultimately pushed President Barack Obama to create DACA, the executive order that protects some immigrants from deportation. Amazingly and frustratingly, Mateo, now 32, might not be able to benefit from the fruits of her own labor; immigration officials say they want to deny her application for DACA.
“It’s retaliation for my organizing and an attempt to silence the community, not just me but an entire community,” Mateo told me.
For Mateo, the rub appears to be a 2013 protest that was livestreamed to more than 10,000 viewers. It occurred on July 22, when Mateo and eight other young immigrants dressed in graduation caps and gowns entered a U.S. point of entry in Nogales, Arizona to request asylum.
The protest made national headlines, because Mateo risked her immigration status by voluntarily returning to Mexico to reenter the U.S. with the other demonstrators. It turned out to be a costly trip to her native country. Mateo says U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) has since sent her two letters stating that they plan to deny her DACA application because of that 13-day stay in Mexico. USCIS declined Fusion’s request to comment on Mateo’s case.
DACA eligibility guidelines stipulate that all applicants must have “continuously resided in the United States since June 15, 2007.”