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Day laborers – illegal immigrants who could be eligible for amnesty under discussion in Congress – gather at the Home Depot in Santa Ana, Calif., to wait for job offers in construction and yardwork. Melanie Stetson Freeman / Staff
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Maria Cobarrubias, an immigration lawyer in Santa Ana, Calif, is one of seven siblings born in the United States to illegal immigrants who were legalized in the 1986 amnesty. Typical of families affected by amnesty, the children were upwardly mobile – six of the seven have college degrees. Melanie Stetson Freeman / Staff
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Angelica Dimas, a school custodian in Santa Ana, Calif., came illegally to the US to work when she was 17 and was able to become naturalized within five years because of the 1986 amnesty. Melanie Stetson Freeman / Staff
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Undocumented students enrolled at UCLA attend a graduation ceremony for 'DREAMers,' or DREAM Act students, at a church near the campus on June 15, 2012. Undocumented youths who came to the United States as children reacted with joy to an Obama administration rule change that could spare them deportation, although critics derided it as 'amnesty.' Jonathan Alcorn/Reuters
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Illegal immigrants prepare to enter a bus after being processed at Tucson Sector US Border Patrol Headquarters Aug. 9, 2012, in Tucson, Ariz. New strategies being implemented by the US government, including the halting of one-way flights back to the interior cities in Mexico, are in place to streamline processing and expedite a return to Mexico. Ross D. Franklin/AP
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Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer leaves a news conference responding to the US Supreme Court decision at the Arizona Capitol Monday, June 25, 2012, in Phoenix. The Supreme Court struck down key provisions of Arizona’s tough law on immigration but said a much-debated portion on checking the status of suspected illegal immigrants could go forward. Ross D. Franklin/AP
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Illegal immigrants Sonia Limas (l.) and her pregnant daughter, Gloriely Lopez, are reflected in a mirror at their home, Sept. 6, 2012, in Alamo, Texas. When health-care reform has been fully implemented, illegal immigrants will make up the nation’s second-largest population of uninsured, or about 25 percent. Eric GayAP
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Supporters of granting drivers licenses to illegal immigrants cheer in Springfield, Ill., after a committee hearing at the Capitol on Jan. 7, 2013. As Illinois becomes the fourth and most populous state to issue drivers licenses to illegal immigrants, concerns persist concerning whether the program will have enough safeguards to avoid identity fraud and other pitfalls experienced by the three other states with similar laws. Seth Perlman/AP
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Petra Falcon, executive director of Promise Arizona, wipes her forehead as Arizona politicians and protesters react to the US Supreme Court decision regarding SB1070. The court struck down key provisions of the Arizona law June 25, 2012, but said that the state could proceed with checking the residency status of suspected illegal immigrants. Ross D. Franklin/AP
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Andy Hernandez, carrying a Mexican flag, and Allison Culver, carrying an American flag, argue over SB1070 outside the State Capitol Building in Phoenix June 25, 2012. Patrick Breen/Arizona Republic/AP
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A Central American migrant sleeps on top of a freight train to travel to north Mexico to reach and cross the US border, in Arriaga in the state of Chiapas, Mexico, Jan. 10, 2012. Hundreds of thousands of migrants, mostly Central Americans, risk robbery, death from fast-moving freight trains, or dehydration in the desert while trying to reach the US illegally. Jorge Luis Plata/Reuters
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US Border Patrol agent Daniel Serrato drives along the border fence in Columbus, N.M., near Palomas, Mexico. Mr. Sarrento's office is responsible for patrolling 47 miles of the border fence. Tony Avelar/Staff
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Cotton farmer Teofilo Flores drives his truck along the US-Mexico border fence that passes through his property in Brownsville, Texas, Sept. 6, 2012. The fence along this section of the border divided people from swaths of their own land, but also struck many as an offensive gesture in this bicultural, bilingual region. Eric Gay/AP
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Morning commuters fill the platform as they exit a train in New York's Times Square subway station, March 14, 2013. An historic decline in the number of US whites and the fast growth of Latinos are blurring traditional black-white color lines, testing the limits of civil rights laws and reshaping political alliances. The demographic shift is now a potent backdrop to an immigration overhaul bill being debated in Congress. Richard Drew/AP
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Sens. John McCain (R) and Charles Schumer (D) help craft the immigration reform bill the Senate is now weighing. Americans will support it if they trust that enforcement is robust enough to prevent a 'future wave' of illegal entries, the senators say.
By
David T. Cook, Staff writer /
May 10, 2013
Michael Bonfigli/The Christian Science Monitor
Sens. Charles Schumer and John McCain are part of a bipartisan group of senators pushing immigration reform. Senator McCain (R) of Arizona was his party's 2008 presidential standard-bearer. Senator Schumer (D) of New York is vice chairman of the Democratic caucus. They were guests at an April 25 Monitor Breakfast.