Hillary Clinton to Latinos: 'I stand with you'
On Cinco de Mayo this year, I sat down in a Las Vegas high school to meet with young Latinos—DREAMers who came to this country as young children with their parents.
Their memories are here in America. Their hopes for the future are here in America. They are as American as my daughter Chelsea and my new baby granddaughter Charlotte—raised with the same love for family and community, the same devotion to public service, the same commitment to giving back that my parents instilled in me when I was young.
The political debate over immigration has never been easy. But I left that room thinking that if folks in their living rooms and politicians on Capitol Hill could just hear these young people—their passion, their love for this country, their dreams of building businesses or becoming doctors or practicing law—well, the debate would be over. We’d have had a solution yesterday.
But I didn’t expect that this summer, the Republican primary would come to seem less like a competition for the highest office in the land and more like a race to see who can make the most hostile, outlandish, vitriolic claims about the immigrant community.
I won’t repeat their comments here. I will only say: America is better than this. I know we’re better than this. We know we’re better than this.
Next year’s election puts our country at a crossroads. Will we continue to be a country that is proud of our immigrant heritage? That continues to welcome the struggling, the striving, and the successful to our shores? That continues to offer unparalleled opportunities and freedoms to all? Or will we make among the biggest mistakes we could by turning our backs on the world and allowing hatred to turn into policy?
I know where I stand.
I stand with America Ferrera, who can make us laugh but also make us think, and who was among the first to speak out against this political season’s hateful rhetoric.
I stand with Jorge Ramos, who was shouted over and removed from a press conference for trying to do his job as a journalist.