Updated 02/03/2009 08:54 AM
NY1 Noticias: Gillibrand Changes Immigration Stance
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In an interview first given to NY1's sister station NY1 Noticias Monday, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand says she will support immigrant-friendly initiatives. NY1's Grace Rauh filed the following report.
As an upstate congresswoman, Kirsten Gillibrand opposed a path to citizenship for immigrants here illegally. She also supported financial penalties for so-called sanctuary cities like New York, which don't enforce immigration laws and even favored federal legislation to deputize local police officers to enforce immigration laws.
A little more than a week into her new job as senator, she's abandoning those positions in an interview with our sister station, NY1 Noticias, and is staking out new ones.
When asked if she will commit to asking President Obama to stop deportations immediately, Gillibrand said, "Yes. I think it's the wrong approach and based on all the information I've now learned, I believe that to be the case."
After an uproar from Latino groups that greeted her appointment to the Senate, Gillibrand is trying to minimize the significance of her congressional record on immigration.
"A lot of these votes, literally, were procedural motions that were taken with five minutes of information given to me about what it says, without the panoply of issues, debate, analysis that I've had the benefit of here," said Gillibrand.
She says her upstate roots put her at a disadvantage when it came to learning about the issue.
"We didn't have the kind of advocacy outreach we have here. Where an elected person can become informed and understand something. I didn't have the benefit of any of it," said Gillibrand.
Gillibrand has been making the rounds to talk about immigration, speaking to NY1 Noticias after a closed-door meeting at the Hispanic Federation in Lower Manhattan. On Sunday, she spoke with Latino lawmakers.
"It's a good beginning. She is listening and today she expressed some changes in her position. But now we have to see how deep she is going to commit to them," said Moises Perez, Alianza Dominicana President.
Advocates say they will be watching her every move, making sure her actions in the Senate reflect the positions she's only now decided to embrace.