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DREAM Act Comes to the Senate Next Week

Senators decide next week if hundreds of thousands of undocumented young people will get a path to citizenship. Student activists are mobilizing to convince them to say yes.

Braden Goyette

September 16, 2010

This post was originally published by Campus Progress.   The Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act is coming to Congress next week, and it could mean a path to citizenship for close to a million undocumented young people.

Senate majority leader Harry Reid announced his intention to present DREAM as an amendment to the Defense Authorization Bill on Tuesday.

The DREAM act provides a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who came here before the age of 16, provided they attend college or serve in the military.

Granted, the DREAM act isn’t a silver bullet. Though there are around 2.1 million undocumented young people who could stand to benefit from this legislation, barriers to citizenship put the number of people who will gain status around 825,000, according to a report from the Migration Policy Institute (h/t to Adam Serwer at The American Prospect).

But it is a good first step toward getting immigration reform back on the political agenda. The Congressional Hispanic Caucus recently came out in favor of passing DREAM as a first step in its four-part plan to move on comprehensive immigration reform. This was part of a broad push by grassroots activism over the past few months that sent the message to politicians that DREAM is something voters really want.

Though the Defense Authorization Bill is considered a "must-pass" bill, it’s not a sure thing that the DREAM Act will get through. The DREAM act needs sixty votes to be approved as an amendment, and if it passes, the Defense Authorization Bill has to go back to the House for final approval. DREAM could still be stripped from the bill in the House.

So, the next week is a crucial time to show popular support for the DREAM act and encourage senators to vote yes—and activists are emphasizing the role students can play in putting pressure on their elected reps. DREAMactivist.org has scripts on its website for supporters to call their senators and implore them to support the amendment.

Braden GoyetteTwitterBraden Goyette is a former web intern at The Nation and staff writer at Campus Progress.


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