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Former migrant and New Mexico State Senator, speaks about immigration

Cindy Nava, a state senator from New Mexico, recalled that her father, a retired police officer who had brought his family illegally to the U.S., taught her respect for the laws. "We grew with this notion that you follow the laws, and ironically, we are (illegal) migrants," said Nava. She is the first former illegal alien and enrollee of the Obama-era Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (DACA) to be elected to a public office in the U.S.

Nava, a former Dreamer and U.S. Citizen for only three years has a nuanced perspective on the issue of illegal immigration that propelled Donald Trump to his second term in office.

One of the first bills that she introduced after taking office on January 1, would prevent state and local resources from being used to support Trump’s federal deportation raids.

It is a legal matter for her. Immigration enforcement is neither a local or state duty.

She is in favor of federal agents pursuing criminal illegal immigrants, and she supports the cooperation between local police and federal officers in cases like human trafficking.

"Criminals must be apprehended. The question is, how do you define a 'criminal?," said Nava during an interview in her office at the Roundhouse in Santa Fe, which houses the State Legislature.

Nava, a young Democratic legislator who is a Latino working class voter, believes that Democrats can move forward with candidates who are like her and understand the Latino working class voters. "I think staying true to our values and ensuring the representation is authentic is a valuable lesson because we've seen the other side do it," said Nava. She enrolled in DACA in 2016, which protects undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. when they were children from deportation.

These people were often referred to by the term "Dreamers" based on proposals that never passed called the DREAM Act. When Nava listens to Democrats such as U.S. She agrees with Senator Ruben Galego of Arizona when he talks about immigration reform and border security. Gallego, Arizona's Republican senator, voted last month for a Republican bill that would have directed federal authorities to deport immigrants accused of theft or violent crimes. This angered many Arizona Democrats. Nava and her family moved to New Mexico at the age of seven. Her father is a builder and her mother is a housekeeper.

As a teenager she became addicted to politics, and spent a decade doing unpaid internships with the Roundhouse. She served as a senior adviser for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development during the Biden Administration.

"We don’t need saviors. We don’t need people who will speak on our behalf," Nava stated. She is worried about Trump's portrayal that all illegal migrants are criminals and the profiling citizens who look like them. Native American leaders have encouraged tribal members in New Mexico to carry their state-issued ID cards and Certificate of Indian Blood – an official U.S. certificate certifying that a person is Native American by ancestry – in case they get caught up in Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations.

"People are afraid, even if they are not immigrants," Nava stated. (Reporting by Andrew Hay; Editing by Donna Bryson, David Gregorio and David Gregorio).

(source: Reuters)