Biden policy is welcome relief for Americans with spouses in the country
illegally
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[June 19, 2024]
By Kristina Cooke and Ted Hesson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When news broke of U.S. President Joe Biden’s
plan to provide a path to citizenship for certain immigrants who entered
the country illegally and are married to U.S. citizens,
Pennsylvania-based immigration lawyer Bridget Cambria didn’t need long
to think of clients it could help.
Over the years, she had met with many such couples, explaining to them
how difficult it was going to be for the immigrant spouse to get U.S.
legal permanent residency. The process, in most cases, required the
immigrant to leave the country, potentially enduring years of family
separation before being eligible to return.
"When I called them, it was nice to tell them something happy for once,”
Cambria said. "Some of them cried, most of them were just in disbelief
or shock."
Biden’s move on Tuesday that would allow hundreds of thousands of
spouses of U.S. citizens to legalize their immigration status without
leaving the United States is a huge development for the families
involved, but it is also a high-stakes political gambit in an election
year.
Biden, a Democrat seeking another term in November, has struggled with
high levels of illegal immigration at the U.S.-Mexico border. His
Republican challenger, hardliner Donald Trump, has pushed a message that
immigrants are committing more violent crimes than U.S. citizens,
despite statistics to the contrary, and "poisoning the blood" of the
country.
Biden has walked a political tightrope in recent months - toughening his
stance on border enforcement while trying not to alienate liberal voters
and Latinos. The Democrat beat Trump in 2020 when Biden pledged a more
humane approach to immigration, a sharp contrast to Trump's four years
in office.
When it comes to immigration policy, registered voters prefer Trump over
Biden by a 17 percentage point margin, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll
conducted in mid-May.
One of the couples Cambria, the Pennsylvania immigration lawyer, called
was Carmen Miranda, 56, and her husband Francisco Cortez, 52, of
Reading, Pennsylvania.
Miranda met Cortez, who is Mexican, through a friend when she was in her
early 20s. He had entered the country illegally in 1987, and she was a
single mother of two young children. They dated for several years before
getting married in 2003.
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Genaro Vicencio, an immigrant from Mexico, poses for a picture with
his American wife Cindy Maduena and their son Israel, as seen in
this undated handout picture. Genaro Vicencio/Handout via REUTERS
Miranda, who has multiple sclerosis and dwarfism and depends on
Cortez to support her, said she was excited when Cambria called her
with the news.
“We waited and waited for so, so long,” Miranda said. “I apologize
if I start crying.”
Miranda said she could not have managed without Cortez if he had
left the country to apply for legal status and entered a years-long
limbo. “I need him here,” she said.
Genaro Vicencio, 24, who crossed the border from Mexico when he was
10 years old, met his American wife Cindy Maduena when they were
both teenagers. They have a 6-year-old son.
Vicencio, who lives in Temple, Pennsylvania, said he has constantly
feared that he would have to leave the U.S. for a long time and his
young son would grow up without a father. He is still trying to
comprehend the magnitude of the announcement for his family, he
said.
“It’s that I don't have to worry, 'Is my son going to have a dad? Is
my family going to be stable?',” he said. “Every morning I had to
wake up and think about that. This is a huge stress reliever.”
Vicencio is hoping that obtaining legal status will enable him to
expand his painting and electrician businesses and access business
loans, he said.
But most of all, he said, he is happy to begin to build a stable
future in the United States.
“I know some people in this country might be like, ‘Oh, it's not a
great country.’ This is a beautiful country. I love it.”
(Reporting by Kristina Cooke in San Francisco and Ted Hesson in
Washington; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)
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