Submitted by: Suzanne
Police arrest 8 House members at immigration rally
LUIS ALONSO LUGO, AP
3 hours ago
WASHINGTON (AP) — At least eight Democratic members of the House
were among about 200 people arrested Tuesday after they blocked a main
street near the Capitol during a massive rally seeking to push
Republicans to hold a vote on a stalled immigration reform bill.
Police
would not identify those arrested. Representatives of the social policy
organization Center for Community Change and The Associated Press
witnessed the arrests of Reps. John Lewis, D-Ga.; Luis Gutiérrez,
D-Ill.; Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz.; Keith Ellison, D-Minn.; Joseph Crowley
and Charles Rangel, both D-N.Y.; Al Green, D-Texas; and Jan Schakowsky,
D-Ill.,
Representatives of other groups whose members attended
the rally, such as United Farm Workers and Farmworker Justice, confirmed
that several of their members were arrested as well.
Those
arrested will be charged with "crowding, obstructing and incommoding"
under the local laws of the District of Columbia, the Capitol Police
said. The arrests began about 4 p.m. EDT and had ended two hours later,
police said in a statement.
Before being arrested, Gutiérrez said
he planned the act of civil disobedience "so the speaker of the House
can free Congress and finally pass immigration reform."
The rally
took place after the six-time Grammy winners Los Tigres del Norte
performed at the National Mall during a show in which the Mexican band
dedicated each song to the estimated 11 million immigrants living in the
United States illegally.
Prospects for passage of a
comprehensive immigration bill appear dim. A bill passed by the
Democratic-controlled Senate and backed by the White House includes
billions of dollars for border security as well as a 13-year path to
citizenship for those already in the U.S. illegally.
It's unclear
whether the GOP-dominated House will ever pass legislation that could
form the basis for a final deal with the Senate. Most House Republicans
have rejected this comprehensive approach, and the House Judiciary
Committee has moved forward with individual, single-issue immigration
bills that could come to the floor sometime later this year or next.
Citing the demonstration, the White House issued a statement calling for the House to take up the immigration bill.
"The
enthusiastic demonstration of support for immigration reform this week
has proven to Congress that the broad coalition behind commonsense
solutions to our nation's broken immigration laws is as strong as it has
ever been," according to the statement from press secretary Jay Carney.
"It's time for the House of Representatives to reopen the government,
pay their bills and get back to the important work of moving the economy
forward."
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