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Jill Stein presidential campaign, 2016/Immigration

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Jill Stein announced her presidential run on June 22, 2015.[1]



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Jill Stein
Green presidential nominee
Running mate: Ajamu Baraka

Election
Green Party National ConventionPollsDebates Presidential election by stateBallot access

On the issues
Domestic affairsEconomic affairs and government regulationsForeign affairs and national security

Other candidates
Hillary Clinton (D) • Donald Trump (R) • Gary Johnson (L) • Vice presidential candidates

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See below what Jill Stein and the 2016 Green Party Platform said about immigration.

CANDIDATE SUMMARY
  • Stein opposed deportation.
  • She supported the DREAM Act and creating a legal status and path to citizenship for individuals living and working in the U.S. without legal permission.
  • Stein supported DACA and DAPA.
  • Green Party Stein on immigration

    • Vox published an interview with Jill Stein on September 14, 2016, covering a range of policy issues, including immigration, student debt, gun control, climate change, and foreign relations.[2]
      • Stein expressed concern with temporary work visas, saying, “There are problems with temporary visas for immigrants — there’s a real downside to that, in that they become second class citizens and they become subject to a whole other tier of low wages. This is partly why we call for full citizenship for immigrants who have been here. That’s the bulk of the issue.”
      • She also said that the "immigration crisis" must be addressed at its root—"predatory U.S. foreign policy." She explained, "We also drive this immigration crisis through the war on drugs, which has killed 100,000 people in Mexico alone over the last six years — that is driving a wave of refugees. And by overturning democracies in other countries — in particular, Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador — by supporting corporate coups as Hillary Clinton did in Honduras, giving them the thumbs up. Death squads — which we have been a party to training — and invasions of other countries. We are creating this wave of refugees, and then shamefully we are then criminalizing these refugees once they come here by detaining, deporting, and night raiding them."
    • On Stein's 2016 presidential campaign website, she called for an end to nighttime deportation raids. She says, "Our nation of immigrants needs a just immigration system that won't allow the ruling elite to divide working people. That means halting deportations, passing the DREAM Act, and creating legal status and a path to citizenship for hard-working, law-abiding undocumented immigrants. The U.S. government shouldn’t be deporting innocent families who are fleeing violence, starvation and persecution in their home countries. Forcing them to return puts them at risk of rape, torture, and death. Many have already had family members murdered or actively threatened with murder."[3]
    • During a phone interview with CounterPunch on February 12, 2016, Paul Street asked Jill Stein about white American workers and fears of immigration. Stein said that the white working class has real reason to fear the impact of immigrants on wages and employment and that the immigration problem is rooted largely in U.S. foreign and economic policies. Stein said, "People ask me 'what are you going to do about immigration?' I say we're going to stop causing it . . . through wars and NAFTA, the war on drugs, coups and military interventions. We need to connect the dots." Stein added, "[P]eople are not stupid. They can and will get it when you make the connections."[4]
    • On Jill Stein's 2012 presidential campaign website, she advocated for the repeal of the Secure Communities Act, the demilitarization of the border and granting legal status to immigrants living and working in the United States without documentation.[5]
    DACA/ DAPA
    • After the United States Supreme Court blocked President Obama from implementing his Immigration Accountability Executive Actions on June 23, 2016, Jill Stein issued the following statement: "Our nation of immigrants needs a just immigration system that won't allow the ruling elite to divide working people. That means halting deportations, passing the DREAM Act, and creating legal status and a path to citizenship for hard-working, law-abiding undocumented immigrants. ... The US government shouldn't be deporting innocent families who are fleeing violence, starvation and persecution in their home countries. Forcing them to return puts them at risk of rape, torture, and death. Many have already had family members murdered or actively threatened with murder." Stein added that "she would seek to reinstate the administrative protections against such deportations and appoint a US Supreme Court Justice that would uphold the constitution and protect the needs of average people," if elected president.[6]
    • After the ruling, Stein also criticized Hillary Clinton in the following tweet: "As SOS Hillary supported the deportation of immigrants. Including refugees coming from Honduras, a crisis she was very much responsible for."[7]

    Recent news

    This section links to a Google news search for the term Jill + Stein + Immigration

    See also

    Footnotes