Sep 20, 2024
Presidential candidate Donald Trump declared his intention to visit Aurora in the coming weeks. If the former president’s own words are any indication, we can expect speeches filled with ugly invective and continued falsehoods about our city and its residents. In response to these distortions, as elected officials serving the city of Aurora, we want to make a few things clear. The United States of America became a nation of immigrants well before 1776. Aurora, the city that we all serve and represent, is home to tens of thousands of immigrants from well over 100 different countries. Today as hundreds of years ago, people come to our country and our city to seek opportunity and to flee persecution and poverty. In recent years, many people from Venezuela in particular have sought a new beginning in the United States. This should not be surprising given years of increasingly dictatorial control by the Maduro regime in Venezuela, culminating in that regime’s assertion of victory in an election earlier this summer that it manifestly, in fact, lost. When immigrants from Venezuela, or any other nation for that matter, arrive in Colorado, they are confronted with the same challenges other Coloradans have — foremost, the higher cost of living since COVID and the scarcity of affordable housing. Further, certain landlords may neglect their legal obligations to maintain rental premises in a safe and livable condition. To this point, a Denver Post headline this week correctly notes “Long before claims of Aurora gang takeover, apartment owners came under fire from inspectors and residents.” In addition, immigrants often face further challenges of learning a new language and culture and being separated from family. These challenges are common to immigrant experiences. Thus they are common to most of our own personal histories and to our history as a country. Unfortunately, for the last several weeks, Venezuelan immigrants in Aurora and our city as a whole have faced another set of entirely avoidable challenges, as certain politicians, influencers, and media outlets have repeatedly mischaracterized basic realities. These blatant mischaracterizations have increased threats of harassment and difficulty in securing housing or employment for our constituents who are Venezuelan. Former President Donald Trump should know that we support the work of law enforcement agencies, from the Federal Bureau of Investigation to the city police department, to protect public safety by holding those who commit crimes to account, whether they are affiliated with any gang or not. Recent immigrants are sometimes particularly targeted by would-be criminals, and they deserve to live without fear of victimization just like any other member of our community. Related Articles Opinion Columnists | Opinion: We all saw the ABC fact check on Trump. Here’s one on Harris. Opinion Columnists | Opinion: CU Boulder has failed for years to address discrimination, harassment, inequity and retaliation Opinion Columnists | Opinion: Amendment 79 will protect Coloradans’ access to the same compassionate abortion care I had Opinion Columnists | Opinion: The proud tradition — tents, backcountry and good food — of maintaining the Colorado Trail Opinion Columnists | Opinion: Colorado ranchers, restaurants worried about ballot issue that would shutter meat processing plant Second, targeting anyone in our community because of their actual or perceived national origin is reprehensible and criminal. Colorado law prohibits bias-motivated harassment or other bias-motivated crime that is “in whole or in part” due to nationality or other legally recognized protected characteristics. In bias-motivated crime, the proximate victim may be one individual, but the ultimate victim is an entire community that is put in fear – deliberately – from these kinds of offenses. Third, we remind our fellow elected officials and those aspiring to elected office to be part of the solution, not part of the problem. Aurora and the entire metro area are home to a tapestry of non-profit organizations dedicated to assisting those in need, including immigrants, with housing, employment, status adjustment, and access to basics like food and transportation. We know from experience that these organizations appreciate willing partners in state and local government. We also know that their jobs are made harder – and that the lives of those they seek to serve are made harder – by inflammatory political rhetoric. It needs to stop. In particular, we condemn any statements that conflate Venezuelan, or any other, nationality with gang membership or criminality. Over 100 years ago, Emma Lazarus memorialized the Statue of Liberty as a beacon of hope for new Americans arriving at the “sea-washed, sunset gates” of New York. More recently, a former city poet laureate proclaimed Aurora “The Ellis Island of the Plains” in celebration of our unique diversity. This is the real Aurora, Colorado, and we celebrate it too. Rep. Mike Weissman represents House District 36 in Adams & Arapahoe Counties. Rep. Iman Jodeh represents House District 41 in Arapahoe County. The following Aurora elected officials also join this op-ed: Sen. Tom Sullivan (Senate District 27), Sen. Rhonda Fields (Senate District 28), Sen. Janet Buckner (Senate District 29), Rep. Naquetta Ricks (House District 40), Rep. Mandy Lindsay (House District 42), Rep. Eliza Hamrick (House District 61), Aurora City Councilor Alison Coombs (At-Large), Aurora City Councilor Crystal Murillo (Ward 1), Aurora City Councilor Ruben Medina (Ward 3), Aurora Public Schools Director Dr. Anne Keke (Board President), Aurora Public Schools Director Michael Carter (Board Vice President), Aurora Public Schools Director Danielle Tomwing (Board Secretary), Aurora Public Schools Director Tiffany Tasker (Board Treasurer), Aurora Public Schools Director Tramaine Duncan, Aurora Public Schools Director Dr. Debra Gerkin, and Aurora Public Schools Director Vicki Reinhard. Sign up for Sound Off to get a weekly roundup of our columns, editorials and more. To send a letter to the editor about this article, submit online or check out our guidelines for how to submit by email or mail.
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