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Puerto Vallarta News NetworkNews from Around the Americas | November 2006 

New Mexico Governor Pleads Illegal Immigrant's Case
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Gov. Bill Richardson answers a question during an interview at the Democratic election watch party in Albuquerque, N.M., Tuesday, Nov. 7, 2006. Richardson defeated Republican challenger John Dendahl to win a second term as governor of New Mexico. (AP/Jake Schoellkopf)
Santa Fe, New Mexico - Gov. Bill Richardson has asked President Bush to come to the aid of an illegal immigrant who has taken refuge in a Chicago church to avoid being deported to Mexico.

Richardson has followed Elvira Arellano's case in news reports and considers her family's plight a "perfect example" of why immigration reform is necessary, his spokesman Jon Goldstein said.

Arellano, a former cleaning woman at O'Hare International Airport convicted of using a false Social Security number, has been in the church since August. Her 7-year-old, US-born son, Saul, this week traveled to Mexico and successfully lobbied its Chamber of Deputies to call for the US Congress to suspend the deportation of illegal immigrant parents of US citizens.

"The Arellano case puts a spotlight on the danger of not acting on a comprehensive immigration plan," Richardson wrote Wednesday in a letter to Bush that was released by the governor's office Thursday. "Inaction puts our most vulnerable citizens - the estimated three million American citizen children of illegal immigrants - at risk."

The governor, whose mother is from Mexico, said that deporting Arellano will create a "terrible choice" for the family - forcing the boy to leave his mother if he stays in the US or "forfeit his right to grow up an American."

The White House media office did not immediately return a call seeking comment Friday.

Richardson, the nation's only Hispanic governor, won re-election this month to a second four-year term. He is considering a bid for the 2008 Democratic nomination for president and says he will make a decision in January.

Immigration hasn't become as contentious a political issue in New Mexico as it has in some other states. The state allows illegal immigrants to obtain a driver's license and children of illegal immigrants qualify for in-state college tuition.



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