Home > Schwarzenegger veto spurs wide opposition

Schwarzenegger veto spurs wide opposition

by Open-Publishing - Tuesday 18 October 2005
3 comments

Elections-Elected Governments USA South/Latin America

by Rosalio Muñoz

LOS ANGELES - Latino immigrant rights leaders are responding to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s veto of SB 60 with a joint mobilization to defeat all Schwarzenegger-backed propositions in the Nov. 8 election. The bill would provide driver’s licenses for over 2 million undocumented workers here.

Shortly after Schwarzenegger vetoed the license measure on Oct. 7, Los Angeles Democratic leaders, state Sen. Gil Cedillo and Assembly Speaker Fabian Nunez called on immigrant rights supporters to join with other labor and civil rights organizations to defeat the governor’s Propositions 74, 75, 76 and 77 in the statewide special election. These measures would limit teacher job rights, union campaign contributions, state funding of schools and other services, and would reapportion congressional districts.

Service Employees International Union Local 1877 President Mike Garcia and Mexican American Political Association (MAPA) President Nativo Lopez joined Cedillo at a rally in downtown Los Angeles on Oct. 9. Hundreds attended - supporting the continuous struggle for immigrant driver’s licenses and to defeat the four propositions.

“The people need driver’s licenses. They are workers, not terrorists, and deserve respect and dignity,” said Cedillo, who pledged to reintroduce the bill as many times as it takes to get it passed. “Broken promises” are unacceptable, he said. “On Nov. 8, we will vote no on Propositions 74, 75, 76 and 77!”

Nativo Lopez of MAPA said the Latino community, immigrants and citizens, should help build a huge turnout to defeat the Schwarzenegger agenda and build a stronger base to eventually win the battle for driver’s licenses for the undocumented workers.

The veto of the license measure “is part of the antilabor, anti-community, anti-Latino and anti-immigrant agenda of Gov. Schwarzenegger” that he is also pushing in the four propositions, said Garcia, the leader of the “Justice for Janitors” union. He called for defeating the propositions because “we need to take joint action to win respect. ... This governor is the exterminator of our hopes and the future of our children.”

Miguel Resendi, who attended the rally, told the La Opinion newspaper here that in November 2004 he had been driving four years without a license. The license “is something we need for our families to have dignity,” he said. The denial of licenses “will change when we have someone in power who realizes we are people of worth in this country,” Resendi added.

Recently, a new coalition has been initiated to get out the vote against the propositions focusing on the Latino community. A “No On Arnold” rally to kick off the effort is planned Oct. 27 at 4 p.m. in Pershing Square, downtown Los Angeles.
rosalio_munoz@sbcglobal.net

http://www.pww.org/article/articleview/7893/1/290

Forum posts

  • Viva La Revolution!

  • Always against the poor and needy!

    • This is a joke, not granting driving priveleges to illegals is oppressing the poor? The poor from other countries are the poor from another county. The real oppression is going on in their home countries. The home country is not to blame for their poor? Places like Mexico dump their poor on the US taxpayers and have no responsibility for their own poor? Now if the evil companies were paying for this I might think differently (of course if these companies were doing the right thing we wouldn’t have this problem going on). But they aren’t. They are using them to lower wages and having the legal taxpayers foot the bill. I guess some won’t be happy until all the countries are like Mexico and there are only the very rich and the very poor. What the world needs to do is to lift up the wages of the poor countries, not bring down the wages of the richer ones. But that’s what illegal aliens do. Hey let the revolution begin but start in Mexico.