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Bill to open unemployment benefits to immigrant ‘Dreamers' advances to legislative debate

Bill to open unemployment benefits to immigrant ‘Dreamers' advances to legislative debate

Yahoo10-03-2025
A bill advanced to debate by the full Legislature would align Nebraska with other states in allowing Dreamers, DACA recipients, access to unemployment benefits. Shown here, supporters of the DACA program rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court. (Robin Bravender/ States Newsroom)
LINCOLN — Nebraska is a step closer to joining other states in allowing 'Dreamers' — and other immigrants who have legal permission to work in the U.S. but who lack permanent residency — access to unemployment insurance benefits.
The Legislature's Business and Labor Committee, despite concerns raised during a previous public hearing, voted last week to advance Legislative Bill 299 on to full debate by the Legislature.
State Sen. Teresa Ibach of Sumner, who introduced the bill along with Sen. Margo Juarez of Omaha, said the U.S. Department of Labor had flagged a 'technical' problem with language in the initial draft, which put federal funding at risk. She said federal and local labor officials worked to resolve the issue.
'Once that was fixed, the committee moved to advance it to the floor for debate by the entire Legislature,' Ibach said. 'Nebraska is the only state that does not allow legal work authorized immigrants to collect unemployment and retirement benefits that they have paid into.'
The previous Feb. 10 public hearing on LB 299 drew testimony that was overwhelmingly in favor of the bill.
Among those who spoke were Nebraska Dreamers, immigrants who grew up in the U.S. after being brought to this country as minors by their parents and who qualified for the Obama administration's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. Those Dreamers, under current Nebraska law, would not be able to receive unemployment benefits, despite that they work with proper authorization and that their employers are required to pay unemployment insurance taxes on their behalf.
In addition to Dreamers, others who would benefit from LB 299 are asylum-seekers who have been granted work authorization while their requests are reviewed and those with Temporary Protected Status, which is granted when returning to a person's home country is unsafe due to natural disaster, extraordinary conditions or war.
Nebraska lawmakers hear support for opening unemployment insurance to immigrant 'Dreamers'
The lone opponent who testified during the public hearing, interim Nebraska Labor Commissioner Katie Thurber, noted the now-addressed problem that had been raised by federal officials. She said more than $400 million in federal unemployment tax credits was at stake because the language was written too broadly, and reached beyond certain federal requirements.
State Sen. Jane Raybould of Lincoln challenged that at the time, saying: 'I find it really hard to believe that we in the state of Nebraska can not get it right like all the other 49 states have done to make sure we are in conformity.'
A similar bill introduced in 2021 failed to pass into law.
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They came to Sacramento for Christian rally. Then they heard about Newsom's redistricting
They came to Sacramento for Christian rally. Then they heard about Newsom's redistricting

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

They came to Sacramento for Christian rally. Then they heard about Newsom's redistricting

For some of the Republican voters who oppose the partisan redistricting plan moving swiftly through the California Capitol this week, it felt like a divine appointment. They arrived in Sacramento on Tuesday — thousands of them, by the busload, from Visalia and Riverside and beyond — for an entirely different mission. Pastor Jack Hibbs, the extremely online leader of the Calvary Chapel Chino Hills megachurch, had called his followers to the Capitol to rally against a bill that would expand who can serve as a child's caregiver when their parents are detained by immigration authorities. It just so happened, however, that the Legislature also scheduled two hearings that morning to advance Gov. Gavin Newsom's controversial proposal asking voters to set aside the state's independent redistricting commission and approve new congressional lines more favorable to Democrats. And as word spread among the flock, dozens of them crowded the halls outside the committee rooms, frustrated and weary conservatives lining up for their precious seconds to publicly denounce another indignity thrust upon them by California's liberal leaders. 'They've been getting away with things for too long,' said Judy Escobedo, a 64-year-old retired teacher from Visalia, as she exited the Assembly hearing where she told legislators that their 'childish' effort to override the redistricting commission made her want to move back to Texas. 'We voted for that because we want to choose our politicians. We don't want our politicians to choose their voters.' Testifying against the redistricting plan was 'topping on the cake' for Escobedo, who came for the Hibbs rally with her sisters. 'Somebody has to do something,' she said, 'and I figured it should be me.' Despite heated opposition and even legal threats from California Republicans, who could lose more than half their remaining seats in Congress, the Democratic supermajority in the Legislature is poised to approve the plan by the end of this week. Newsom would then call a special election for Nov. 4, when voters would have the final say on the new map. A handful of supporters, most of them affiliated with organized labor, showed up at the hearings to speak in favor of what they argue is a necessary step to prevent President Donald Trump from rigging the outcome of the 2026 midterms. Trump is pressuring Republican-led states across the country to undertake an unusual mid-decade redistricting to shore up the narrow GOP majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. 'We are in a moment where we have to respond to an existential threat,' state Sen. Sabrina Cervantes, a Riverside Democrat, said during the Senate hearing. 'Do you expect Californians to unilaterally disarm ourselves when the Trump Republicans are wielding their control of state governments like weapons against democracy?' But they were far outnumbered by the serendipitous throng of opponents, many of whom walked right off their chartered buses and into the line for public testimony. Republicans feel 'unrepresented' Some were resigned that they would not halt what has appeared to be an increasing inevitability in recent weeks. Newsom has rallied public support through appearances with Democratic legislators who fled Texas to block a similar gerrymandering effort there. 'I'm not changing these people's minds,' said David Bolog, a 55-year-old maintenance worker with the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. Since the coronavirus pandemic, he has been traveling to the Capitol weekly as a 'citizen lobbyist' for right-leaning groups like Moms For Liberty. 'We already feel very unrepresented,' Bolog said. He was among a sparse crowd outside the Senate hearing earlier in the morning. 'Even though you know it's not going to stop it, you still have to say no.' Behind him, Maria Carrillo entertained her children, ages 7 and 5. They left Riverside at 1 a.m. to make the drive to Sacramento for the Hibbs rally. Carrillo, a 36-year-old homeschool teacher, planned to turn their visit to the Capitol into a field trip for her children as well. Like many Californians, Carrillo, who wore a shirt calling to keep men out of girls' sports, said she had become politically active during the pandemic fights over shutdowns and mandatory vaccines. She wanted Democratic leaders to hear from some of the millions of Trump voters, like her, who supported the president's agenda and would be disenfranchised by the new congressional lines. 'What I hope is they do listen to the real people who live in these communities and are affected by these policies,' she said. Rep. Kevin Kiley voters show up A contingent from the El Dorado County GOP huddled in a corner, monitoring the hearing but hesitant to testify against a plan they felt certain would be ramrodded through. 'We all know this is a farce anyway,' said Todd White of El Dorado Hills, the club's chair. 'A redistricting war doesn't benefit anybody,' said Doug Williams of South Lake Tahoe, the club's vice chair. He said California was chasing Texas ''to the bottom of the barrel.' The Democrats' map moves El Dorado County from a sprawling rural district along the eastern border of California — represented by Rep. Kevin Kiley, a Rocklin Republican — to a new seat that stretches out from the more liberal Sacramento suburbs. Williams feared that the issues facing his mountainous community, such as wildfire preparedness and the declining availability of home insurance, would be overlooked. 'This is only designed to benefit one person and that's Gavin Newsom,' White said, alluding to expectations that Newsom will soon launch a campaign for president. White complained that the governor was using taxpayer money to run a special election and 'he's made it all about himself.' 'Why isn't he doing his job?' club treasurer Heather Masten said. After some deliberation, she stepped into the hearing to deliver a brief comment in opposition. Then the group wandered over to the Assembly hearing to do it all over again. 'We'll be here all day,' White said, 'just getting oppressed by the majority party.' This article originally appeared on Visalia Times-Delta: Newsom redistricting plan fires up group attending Christian rally

Fix the City's next act is Mamdani-esque
Fix the City's next act is Mamdani-esque

Politico

time3 hours ago

  • Politico

Fix the City's next act is Mamdani-esque

New York Minute: Gov. Kathy Hochul FaceTimed with Democratic Texas state lawmakers Tuesday evening ahead of the contentious mid-decade redistricting vote, which is expected to bolster Republicans in five Lone Star State House districts. 'We know this is not about red versus blue, it's about right versus wrong,' Hochul told the lawmakers, according to audio obtained by Playbook. 'You are the leaders in this and history is going to look back on you favorably.' Hochul hosted Texas Democrats who bolted from the state to delay the vote. They returned Monday, giving the Legislature a quorum. Hochul is pushing for ways to change New York's redistricting process to build on Democratic advantages; any changes won't happen in time for the 2026 elections. — Nick Reisman FIXING FIX: The behemoth pro-Andrew Cuomo PAC that spent millions futilely vilifying Zohran Mamdani in the mayoral primary now wants to be more like him — though only when it comes to emulating his organizing prowess. Fix the City is launching MainStream, a new group that aims to 'protect our city from extremism' by 'building a growing force of volunteers' and plans to host an introductory Zoom call tonight, according to invitations obtained by Playbook. 'Mamdani's primary win was fueled by an army of 40,000 volunteers. Thankfully, there are far more of us — those who reject extremism, socialism, antisemitism and the politics of division — than them,' reads an intake form that lists volunteer opportunities like voter registration drives and 'social media activist.' The anti-Mamdani effort is ramping up as the democratic socialist victor of the Democratic primary looks to the November general election with a healthy polling lead over Cuomo, incumbent Mayor Eric Adams — both running as independents — and Republican Curtis Sliwa. Fix the City — funded primarily by former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, hedge fund billionaire Bill Ackman and DoorDash — spent more than $22 million in its effort to thwart Mamdani in June. Despite failing in that effort, it's still bringing in big money for the general election. Its contributions this month include $100,000 from Walmart scion and philanthropist Alice L. Walton, according to public filings and as reported by Crain's New York. Its revamped website touts a mission to provide 'voters with the tools they need to make their voices heard — not just in this election cycle, but in the years to come,' noting that the PAC believes the best choice for mayor remains Cuomo. 'This is a wake-up call for what I would characterize as regular Democrats: If you want to have a say in your government, you're going to have to get organized and you're going to have to convince voters to show up at the polls,' Steven M. Cohen, chair of Fix the City, who served as Cuomo's secretary when he was governor, said in an interview with Playbook. The work of getting out the vote in elections — including door-knocking, pamphleting and voter registration — has been a forte for the political left, including the Democratic Socialists of America and the Working Families Party. Fix the City via MainStream seeks to lay the foundation for an organizing operation that could boost more moderate Democrats for other offices and in other election cycles, Cohen said. 'I don't want to lose sight of the November election. But also, I think there are a whole lot of people who belong in Congress, belong in Albany, belong in the statehouse,' Cohen said, 'And I worry if we don't mount an effective response to what was a very well-organized and … a very well-financed operation, we're going to be on the outside looking in.' Mamdani defeated Cuomo in June by nearly 13 points, but the relative newcomer is still struggling to get his party to coalesce behind him before November. Mamdani has yet to be endorsed by party leaders including Gov. Kathy Hochul, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. Mamdani has sought to position Cuomo as Trump's choice for president as the rivals duke it out in the coming months. Cuomo recently told prospective donors in the Hamptons that Trump could tell Republicans to back him for mayor if they want Mamdani stopped, POLITICO reported. Mamdani, a Queens state assemblymember, has a new super PAC in his corner, the Daily News reported, and his anti-billionaire message of the primary is carrying through to the general. 'Andrew Cuomo and his Republican billionaire donors are about to learn that a competitive ground game can't be bought,' Mamdani campaign spokesperson Dora Pekec said in a statement responding to Fix the City's new campaign to turn out votes. 'Zohran already defeated millions in special interest money in the primary, and he'll do it again — because New Yorkers are ready to fight for a city they can actually afford.' — Emily Ngo IT'S WEDNESDAY. Got news? Send it our way: Jeff Coltin, Emily Ngo and Nick Reisman. WHERE'S KATHY? In Syracuse, making an announcement at the Great New York State Fair and likely visiting the Wizard of Oz-themed butter cow sculpture. WHERE'S ERIC? Opening a campaign office in Harlem. 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Hochul responded with a three-page letter to Bondi as Trump implements his deportation agenda and spurns Democrat-led parts of the country for purportedly protecting undocumented immigrants. 'I recognize that you disagree with New York's view of what the constitution requires of states, and the legality of New York State law and policy, and now — contrary to the positions you took as Florida Attorney General — believe states are merely vassals of the federal government,' Hochul wrote. 'These disputes are rightly before the courts for resolution.' Rochester via its corporation counsel Patrick Beath said that Bondi shouldn't be writing to Mayor Malik Evans at all, since the correspondence 'appears to be a violation of your ethical obligations as an attorney.' That's because the Trump administration has filed a lawsuit against Rochester challenging its 'sanctuary' policies. 'Given this pending litigation, you — as counsel for the government of the United States — should have no direct communication with my clients without my prior permission,' Beath wrote. New York City's response was the most succinct of those obtained Tuesday by Playbook. Adams has criticized the 'sanctuary' laws put in place before his time in office but said he would uphold them. He has sought to work with Trump while also standing up to him in some areas. As part of a two-paragraph letter to Bondi, the city's Corporation Counsel Muriel Goode-Trufant wrote: 'The city's choices do not 'thwart' such enforcement; rather, they merely reflect choices the City has the legal right to make in our federal system.' — Emily Ngo CITY HALL: THE LATEST CUOMO PROPOSITIONS: New York City faces an entrenched prostitution problem, even as the Adams administration has greatly ramped up arrests, Cuomo said after a Monday morning visit to Elmhurst, Queens. But the problem would be even worse if Mamdani decriminalized prostitution as mayor. 'It's not going well,' Cuomo told Playbook. 'There's rampant prostitution on Roosevelt Avenue. … It's gotten worse over the last two years. That's what they all say.' Cuomo's main focus was to draw a contrast with Mamdani, who co-sponsors a state bill to decriminalize prostitution. But Adams doesn't support decriminalization, and his admin has been cracking down on sex work. Asked what he'd do differently, Cuomo said 'stepped up enforcement' and 'focus on the operation behind them,' not just the sex workers. City Hall said that's exactly what they're doing, touting that seven major crimes are down 35 percent compared to last year in the special enforcement zone set up around Roosevelt Ave. — totaling 350 fewer incidents than in 2024. 'Anyone dropping by Roosevelt Avenue for a photo-op should do their homework before spreading lies, because working-class New Yorkers in Queens are not political pawns — they're real people who, under our administration, are finally getting the results they deserve,' Adams said in a statement. Cuomo said prostitution needs to remain a crime, because it would 'proliferate' otherwise, and arrests can be used to drive people to treatment and services. He said decriminalization advocates like Mamdani have 'a romanticized version of prostitution that I think is unrealistic. … I don't think anybody goes home and says to their daughter at night, 'Honey, I hope you grow up to be a good prostitute.' We're better than that.' 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Antonio Delgado — who is running a long-shot primary bid against Hochul — has seized on the 33-year-old democratic socialist's upset primary win as a sign New Yorkers are turning against candidates who represent the status quo. Warshaw said he would vote for Mamdani in the general election. DiNapoli has not endorsed in the race, a stance that's in keeping with other statewide elected officials like Hochul. The comptroller's campaign did not comment when reached by Playbook. Warshaw is mounting a spirited bid against DiNapoli, who is the longest serving elected official in state government and has never faced a primary. The comptroller's job — overseeing the state pension fund and auditing spending — is a low-profile one. But Warshaw believes the cost concerns fit with his push to leverage the pension fund to build more housing and scrutinize state spending. 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Hochul wants voters to feel safe — especially on mass transit — and can tout statistics proving her point that safety has improved. But it all comes as Republicans signal they'll again make public safety a campaign issue as she runs for reelection. — Nick Reisman More from Albany: — DiNapoli says there's a gap in rural health care coverage. (Spectrum News) — New York lawmakers this week will scrutinize the state's troubled home care program. (New York Focus) — Trump's 'political weaponization czar' Ed Martin urged Attorney General Letitia James to step down. (Associated Press) KEEPING UP WITH THE DELEGATION — House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries said Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem would be the focus of a congressional investigation if Democrats flip the House in the midterms. (The Guardian) — Trump budget officials claim sweeping spending power from Congress, records show. (Washington Post) — A spat between Rep. 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Trump Admin Grapples With Supreme Court Dilemma on Birthright Citizenship
Trump Admin Grapples With Supreme Court Dilemma on Birthright Citizenship

Newsweek

time3 hours ago

  • Newsweek

Trump Admin Grapples With Supreme Court Dilemma on Birthright Citizenship

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The Trump administration is seeking more time in federal court as it considers how to bring a challenge to birthright citizenship before the U.S. Supreme Court. In a consent motion filed on August 19 in the District of Maryland, government lawyers requested an additional 30 days to respond to an amended complaint in CASA Inc. v. Trump. The case contests executive order 14160, titled "Protecting the Meaning and Value of American Citizenship." The order denies citizenship at birth when the mother is unlawfully present (or lawfully but temporarily present) and the father is not a U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident. Newsweek contacted the Department of Justice for comment by email outside regular working hours on Wednesday. Why It Matters The case goes to the core of the 14th Amendment's citizenship clause, which for more than a century has guaranteed citizenship to almost everyone born on U.S. soil. A successful challenge could affect hundreds of thousands of children born each year to undocumented parents, while also testing the limits of presidential power to redefine constitutional rights through executive orders. With the Trump administration signaling that it plans to seek a Supreme Court review, the litigation has the potential to reshape immigration law and the broader debate over American identity. What To Know The plaintiffs, a coalition of immigrant-rights organizations led by CASA, amended their complaint in June. On July 18, the government's deadline to respond was extended to August 22. The new motion seeks to push that date back to September 22. According to the filing, the delay is tied to the administration's broader legal strategy. The Justice Department acknowledged that multiple lawsuits were pending against the executive order across different jurisdictions. To resolve the matter more definitively, the solicitor general is preparing to ask the Supreme Court to take up the issue in its next term. "To that end, the Solicitor General of the United States plans to seek certiorari expeditiously to enable the Supreme Court to settle the lawfulness of the Executive Order next Term, but he has not yet determined which case or combination of cases to take to the Court," government attorneys wrote. The administration emphasized that the extension request was not an attempt to stall the proceedings. "This request is not made for purposes of delay, and no party will be prejudiced by the relief requested herein, particularly because Plaintiffs consent to the same," the motion said. On August 7, the court in Maryland granted a classwide preliminary injunction, applying nationwide to members of the certified class. Birthright citizenship newspaper headlines on the U.S. Constitution. Birthright citizenship newspaper headlines on the U.S. Constitution. iStock / Getty Images Plus Birthright Citizenship and the 14th Amendment Executive order 14160 has drawn criticism from immigrant advocacy groups, which argue that birthright citizenship is guaranteed under the 14th Amendment. The constitutional provision says, "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States." The administration, however, has contended that the clause does not extend to the children of undocumented immigrants. By moving toward a Supreme Court review, the administration appears to be seeking a definitive ruling on the scope of the citizenship clause. The outcome could have significant implications for immigration law and the legal status of U.S.-born children of noncitizen parents. What People Are Saying Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, criticizing the administration's approach in the Supreme Court, said on May 15: "Your argument … would turn our justice system into a 'catch me if you can' kind of regime, in which everybody has to have a lawyer and file a lawsuit in order for the government to stop violating people's rights." Justice Sonia Sotomayor, emphasizing constitutional precedent, added: "So, as far as I see it, this order violates four Supreme Court precedents." What Happens Next If the Trump administration's request for more time is approved, the government's deadline would move to September 22. For now, a nationwide injunction continues to block the order, leaving it unenforceable. Justice Department lawyers say they are considering which case to present to the Supreme Court for review in the next term, a move that could bring arguments before the justices in 2026. Both sides have agreed to the extension, and the government emphasized that no party would be harmed by the delay. While the extension keeps the litigation on hold, the broader fight over birthright citizenship is poised to escalate. On June 27, the court ruled on nationwide injunctions in Trump v. CASA but did not decide the merits of birthright citizenship. The administration now plans to seek a full review next term on the lawfulness of the executive order itself. If the court grants the review, it will put the question of the core citizenship clause before the justices in a way not seen since United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898).

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