Since 1975, nearly 200,000 Hmong and Lao refugees have started new lives in the U.S. In Minnesota and Wisconsin, the heroism of Hmong veterans who fought with U.S. forces during the Vietnam War is not only recognized, but honored. Today, Hmong-American and Lao-American communities are thriving and making our country stronger and more successful.
These communities are now threatened by the Trump administration's cruel and destructive immigration policies that betray the promises made to Hmong veterans and their families. Today, more than 4,700 Hmong and Lao individuals in the U.S. who never became naturalized citizens face deportation to Laos due to past criminal convictions that may have taken place decades ago.
Ironically, it is the Lao government's unwillingness to receive deportees and their refusal to sign a repatriation agreement with the U.S., despite pressure from the State Department, that may be the only obstacle preventing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from carrying out the deportations of Hmong and Lao individuals with orders for removal.
I recently received a letter from a St. Paul constituent at risk of deportation. He wrote that his father fought with Gen. Vang Pao in Laos, and they fled after the war. He arrived in the U.S. as a 5-month-old refugee. His mother eventually became a naturalized citizen and she assumed her son would automatically become a citizen. This was not the case and he now is facing deportation to Laos as a result of a past criminal record.
He writes: "I am now 44 years of age and I am no longer committing crimes. I have a family, I work and pay taxes, and I live a very frugal, and humble, ordinary life … it is inhumane to send someone to a country they've never lived in, nor speak the language."
I completely agree — it is inhumane. It is cruel. And it can be a matter of life and death.
I have long supported reforms to federal immigration law that would allow noncitizens who are contributing community members to receive relief for past mistakes and find a pathway to legal residency and eventual citizenship. For more than a decade, Republicans have instead chosen to scapegoat immigrants as a campaign strategy.
Seeking common ground or constructive, compassionate solutions are not part of today's Republican policy agenda or political playbook. Instead, their priorities are mass deportations, travel bans, locking up children and misappropriating taxpayer funds to build a useless border wall.