• January 14th, 2025
  • Tuesday, 07:01:48 PM

New México ‘Dreamer’ Sets Sights on State Legislature


Cindy Nava is running for New México Senate in District 9. / Cindy Nava que se postula para el Senado de Nuevo México por el Distrito 9. (Foto: Cindy Nava for New México)

 

By Roz Brown

Posted July 11, 2024

 

A “Dreamer” running for the New México Senate said a Biden administration plan to create pathways allowing Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals beneficiaries to more quickly gain legal status could encourage others to follow her lead.

 

I believe our families come from a place where we have always been afraid and my own parents tell me day to day. But we learn to live with that fear and build resilience to work forward.”
Cindy Nava

 

Cindy Nava bested her primary opponent earlier this month to face Republican Audrey Trujillo in November for the state’s Senate District 9 seat. Nava was the first DACA recipient to receive a presidential appointment as Senior Policy Advisor to the U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development.

 

Nava worked in the New México Statehouse on behalf of Democratic lawmakers for a decade but could not get paid because she was undocumented. She eventually enrolled in the DACA program and became a U.S. citizen through marriage.

 

“I believe our families come from a place where we have always been afraid and my own parents tell me day to day,” Nava pointed out. “But we learn to live with that fear and build resilience to work forward.”

 

The 12-year-old DACA program provides protection from deportation and work authorization for undocumented young people who arrived as children and grew up in the U.S. The recent Biden initiative would allow those who have earned a college degree and received an offer of employment from a U.S. employer in a field related to their degree to more quickly receive work visas.
Born in Chihuahua, México, Nava grew up in Albuquerque and Santa Fe. She noted the U.S. population is shifting and predicted soon, DACA recipients will be occupying seats in Congress. She believes they need a more stable pathway, requiring bipartisan cooperation at all levels of government.

 

“New México’s a great example of having leaders who have invested in opening opportunities for immigrants, from educational opportunities to driver’s licenses for immigrants,” Nava emphasized. “All of those things actually can be undertaken at a state level, and can be deeply meaningful.”

 

There are currently about 600,000 DACA recipients across the country, with more than 75% in the workforce.

 

 

 

Roz Brown is a Producer with Public News Service.