Showing posts with label same-sex binational couples. Show all posts
Showing posts with label same-sex binational couples. Show all posts

Monday, July 01, 2013

Department of Homeland Security: Implementation of the Supreme Court Ruling on the Defense of Marriage Act


Statement from Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano

“After last week’s decision by the Supreme Court holding that Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) is unconstitutional, President Obama directed federal departments to ensure the decision and its implication for federal benefits for same-sex legally married couples are implemented swiftly and smoothly.  To that end, effective immediately, I have directed U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) to review immigration visa petitions filed on behalf of a same-sex spouse in the same manner as those filed on behalf of an opposite-sex spouse.”

Please visit the DHS website for FAQs for same-sex binational couples.

Out4Immigration has compiled the following resources for attorney recommendations and resources:

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

BREAKING: Supreme Court’s DOMA Decision Grants Same-Sex Binationals Federal Immigration Rights



Key Part of Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) Struck Down,
California's Proposition 8 Case Dismissed

Media Contacts:
Amos Lim, Out4Immigration, 415-742-1626, amos@out4immigration.org
Kathy Drasky, Out4Immigration, 415-606-2085, kathy@out4immigration.org


SAN FRANCISCO – JUNE 26, 2013 – The Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) struck down Section 3 of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) this morning and declared that same-sex couples who are legally married deserve equal rights to the benefits under federal law that go to all other married couples. Of the more than 1,100 federal rights no one is more critical to same-sex binational couples than immigration – or the right of an American citizen to sponsor a foreign-born spouse for permanent residency, or a green card.

In a separate ruling, SCOTUS also dismissed California’s Proposition 8 case, a referendum that took away marriage equality from gay and lesbian couples in 2008. This ruling returns the case to a previous 2009 state ruling that declared Proposition 8 was “unconstitutional” under California law. 

Both rulings were decided on 5-4 votes. Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote the opinion on the DOMA case. Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the opinion for the Prop. 8 case.

While the DOMA ruling is clear – federal benefits for any couple that is legally married in a state, country or jurisdiction where same-sex marriage is legal, the Proposition 8 ruling will take more time for lawmakers to sort out. In the best case scenario, marriage equality will be restored to California within a month. 

“Out4Immigration is elated with the results of today’s decisions. One of our routes to immigration equality for same-sex binational couples has always been the demise of DOMA. Today that has happened,” said Amos Lim, Co-founder and Community Outreach Director of Out4Immigration.

“We will continue to watch how the Proposition 8 decision unfolds and hope for a quick restoration of marriage equality in California,” Lim added.

As California, the most populous state, restores marriage equality for its citizens, there will now be 13 states, as well as the District of Columbia, where same-sex marriage is legal.

Lim pointed out, however, that same-sex binational couples currently living in the states that lack marriage equality will need to travel to a place where same-sex marriage is legal in order to obtain a marriage that will give them federal benefits. Although federal benefits will be available to these couples, those living in states that lack equal marriage protection will continue to be subject to discrimination at the state level.

“We remain concerned that statutory barriers are still in place for some couples and urge Congress to immediately repeal DOMA in its entirety,” said Lim.

Democratic members of Congress were quick to praise the DOMA ruling and pledged to introduce legislation that would finish the job of fully repealing the discriminatory law.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) took to Twitter to say, "I will introduce legislation ASAP to repeal discriminatory DOMA once and for all.”

Same-sex binational couples seeking advice on how to proceed with marriage and fiancée visa petitions (i.e., "green card applications”) are encouraged to view these resources: “After DOMA: What It Means for You” from the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), After DOMA: Immigration from Lambda Legal and “The End of DOMA: What Your Family Needs to Know” from Immigration Equality.

The law firm, Masliah and Soloway are offering free consultations to same-sex binational couples. Email them at consult@masliah-soloway.com

Also, the law firm McCown and Evans is offering free consultations to same-sex binationals. Please contact them at (415) 834-9123, or email info@mccownevans.com.  

In the San Francisco Bay Area, McCown and Evans will be hosting a series of free legal workshops for same-sex binationals in July and August. Visit http://out4immigration.blogspot.com/2013/06/upcoming-information-sessions-marriage.html for details.

# # #
______________
For more information:

Out4Immigration blog (featuring stories of same-sex binationals): http://out4immigration.blogspot.com/
United by Love, Divided by Law (visual protest by same-sex binational couples separated by U.S. immigration laws): http://unitedbylovedividedbylaw.tumblr.com
Count Me In / Same-Sex Binationals Share Their Stories: http://bit.ly/O4ICountMeIn


end
____________
Out4Immigration is a national grassroots organization dedicated to raising awareness about the discrimination same-sex binational couples face under current U.S. immigration law and the difficulties they encounter in keeping their families together legally in this country. For more information, visit www.out4immigration.org.
 

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

VIDEO: Where Is Home? Ken & Otts Tell Their Story

Where is Home? A Binational Gay Love Story from otts on Vimeo.
Ken, an American citizen, and his foreign-born spouse Otts, have already endured one painful separation. In 2014, they are facing another one...unless tomorrow's decision by the Supreme Court of the United States renders Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) unconstitutional.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

Join Out4Immigration at San Francisco Pride, June 29-30 and Attend DOMA Day of Decision Rally (Various Locations)

Another Day of Decision has come and gone, leaving only three more potential days for the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS) to announce their decisions on the pending DOMA and Proposition 8 cases.

Those dates are now: Monday, June 24, Thursday, June 27 or Friday, June 28.

Win, lose or draw - be sure to make your voice heard. Attend a Day of Decision rally in your city. Check this link for information. Our legal sources have informed us that if DOMA is overturned, same-sex binationals will be able to file marriage-based green card applications. We encourage you to consult with your immigration attorney as soon as possible. If you need recommendations, you can email us at info@out4immigration.org.

One thing is certain. We will have a SCOTUS decision before San Francisco Pride on June 29-30. That's why we need all hands on deck to help disseminate information at our booth at Civic Center on both days, as well as to march with us at 10 am on Sunday, June 30.
  • To volunteer for a 2-hour shift at our booth, June 29-30, please RSVP at this Facebook link.
  • To march with us at San Francisco Pride on June 30, please RSVP at this Facebook link.
Not on Facebook, but ready to help out? Let us know at info@out4immigration.org

This year we are again sharing booth space with our allies Marriage Equality USA (MEUSA) and marching behind their contingent in the parade. Our message is very much linked to theirs - marriage equality has always been one of the pathways to ending immigration inequality. With our current exclusion from the Senate immigration bill, the pathway to green cards for same-sex binationals hinges heavily on the DOMA decision. 

We will put out an email on the Day of Decision sharing with all of you what we know and available resources. Please keep visiting the Facebook links above and checking our blog and Yahoo News Group for our Pride booth number and Parade contingent meetup time and place. We'll encourage those of you marching in the parade to bring your own signs -- will they say finally "United by Love, United by Law" or ....?

Take a deep breath.

“I know that you cannot live on hope alone, but without it,
life is not worth living." - Harvey Milk.
harvey_milk

UPCOMING INFORMATION SESSIONS: Marriage after DOMA - Why You Should Walk (Not Run) to Tie the Knot

Save these dates - and RSVP now.


The law firm of McCown & Evans along with the Beck Law Group will be holding four free information sessions in San Francisco* and the East Bay* in July and August to assist same-sex binational couples with post-DOMA issues (pending Sectiion 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act, DOMA, being found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court).


  • San Francisco dates are: Tuesday, July 16 (5:30-7pm) and Thursday, August 22 (5:30-7pm) at San Francisco Public Library, Koret Auditorium,100 Larkin Street, San Francisco, CA 94102 
  • East Bay dates are: Tuesday, July 30 (6:30-8pm) and Saturday, August 17 (10-11:30am) at Bananas Inc., Main Meeting Room, 5232 Claremont Avenue, Oakland, CA 94618

Speakers will include immigration attorneys Kelly McCown and Jeptha Evans, Partners/Co-Founders of McCown & Evans LLP and tax attorney Alma Soongi Beck of the Beck Law Group, P.C. 

Topics for discussion will include: 

  • Immigration options for same-sex binational couples after DOMA 
  • Requirements for fiancé visas or marriage-based green cards 
  • Federal Income Tax implications after DOMA 
  • Social Security benefits implications after DOMA 

To RSVP, please contact Andrea from McCown & Evans LLP at info@mccownevans.com or (415) 834-9123. For additional information, please see www.mccownevans.com or www.becklawgroup.com.

COST: Seminars are free of charge. These are informational seminars. There is no cost or obligation.

This event is hosted by the Beck Law Group, McCown & Evans, Our Family Coalition, Gay Asian Pacific Alliance, Asian Pacific Islander Queer Women & Transgender Community, API Equality and Out4Immigration.

*Plans are being made to record these sessions and make them available later on YouTube.
 

Monday, June 17, 2013

Meet Michelle Dicinoski, Author of "Ghost Wife" - A Memoir about Same-Sex Marriage, with a Binational Perspective


by Kathy Drasky

Author Michelle Dicinoski
Being part of an American=Australian same-sex binational marriage, I spend a fair bit of time Down Under with my wife, whose work - and visa requirements - bring her back home several times a year. On my last trip I learned about the memoir, Ghost Wife, by Australian writer Michelle Dicinoski, who is married to an American woman, now living in exile. It took us a while to catch up, but when we did, Michelle agreed to answer a number of questions about her binational marriage and its basis for Ghost Wife.

Out4Immigration: At Out4Immigration, we always ask people to tell us their story – well, you wrote a book! Can you tell us how you met your wife – and at what point you realized that being in a same-sex binational relationship was not going to be easy, immigration-wise?

Michelle: I met Heather in 2004, when we were both studying at the University of Queensland, in Brisbane. Heather grew up in Florida, and also lived for several years in Massachusetts. I grew up in Queensland, and had never traveled overseas when I first met Heather. From the moment our relationship became serious, we were definitely worried about what would happen after Heather’s visa ended. Would she have to return to the United States without me? What would that mean for our relationship? We were lucky because she had a three-year student visa, which gave us time to get to know each other and even to marry (in Canada). But as it turned out, Heather’s application for permanent residency in Australia was approved quite smoothly, so we were able to stay put.

Out4Immigration: Can you tell us about the Australian laws that allow you and your wife to live together there, in spite of an Australian "DOMA-like" ban against same-sex marriage?  

Michelle: Although Australia does not recognize same-sex marriage, it has for many years recognized same-sex relationships as "interdependent relationships" for purposes of migration. As long as couples can prove that they have a genuine, ongoing relationship of some standing, foreign nationals who are in relationships with an Australian seem generally to be approved (after a longish assessment period) to migrate to Australia. Most of the people I know of who've done this have been American or European, though; I am not sure if it's harder if you’re from another region.

Out4Immmigration:
The title of your book is Ghost Wife. What does that originate from?

Michelle:
While preparing for our wedding trip, I heard a story about ghost marriages. In these marriages, which have been relatively common in China, a living person can be married to the spirit of a dead person. I was fascinated by this idea; marriage has been so many different things, at different times and in different places. Most of all, I was provoked by the idea that in some places, ghosts can marry, when for Heather and me, our marriage itself would be a kind of ghost. We would return from Canada married, but not. As I write in the memoir, I began to wonder: "Would we forever ghost at the edges of things – families, laws, histories? There is a certain mystique in invisibility, but not when it's thrust upon you. Sometimes you just want to be seen." So I decided to write about our wedding as a way of making it visible. As I put it in Ghost Wife, if our countries refused to acknowledge our wedding, "I'd document what happened in an irrefutable way: I'd write about the wedding and the journey leading up to it. It would be a permanent record. A testament. Proof."

Out4Immigration:
Writing a memoir like this had to be cathartic. Has it helped you deal better with the inequality of the situation – your marriage not being recognized in either Australia or the U.S. ? The inability of your wife to sponsor you to live in America due to our unfair immigration laws?

Michelle: It hasn't really provided a release in any way, but the writing process has been fascinating. Perhaps the best part was including the stories of other queers who also lived in marriage-like relationships, but 50 or 100 or 150 years ago. I map their stories onto the places that Heather and I visit — Melbourne, Boston, Toronto, Niagara Falls — to show that queer lives have always existed, although they have often been suppressed or denied. My hope is that by telling these stories — Heather’s and mine, and the stories of other "ghost wives" — I will help increase awareness of our situation, so that one day I can live in the U.S. with Heather, if that is where our lives take us. Especially as our parents age, questions of residency become increasingly important. We should be able to return to care for Heather's parents and other family members, if they need us to, but at the moment we can't, not as a couple. It ends up being a choice between partner and family, and no one should have to make that choice.

Out4Immigration:
How does your wife feel about living in exile?

Michelle:
I write a little about the United States being closed to us, and how strange it is that Heather has left behind another whole life there, a life that we can only return to sporadically. Although she misses her family and friends, Heather is very happy in Australia. Still, we would both love the opportunity to live in the U.S. as a couple.

Out4Immigration:
This is a two-part question. If DOMA is repealed and your marriage is suddenly recognized by the U.S. government, what do you think you and your wife will do? And, if America suddenly has marriage equality – do you think Australia will soon follow suit?

Michelle:
If DOMA is repealed, the first thing Heather and I will do is have a big party! An international, multi-time zone party involving Skype and champagne. As for whether we will move, that's another question; we just moved interstate last year, and that was traumatic enough. I think our cats might disown us if we moved again any time soon. If the U.S. suddenly has marriage equality, the pressure on Australia will certainly increase. In fact, the recent change [marriage equality] in New Zealand seems to have increased people's belief that it is just a matter of time, and that Australia must change soon.

Out4Immigration:
What has been the reaction to Ghost Wife in Australia?

Michelle:
The reaction has been wonderful. The reviews have been so positive, and I have been thrilled to see the book supported by both the mainstream and queer media.

Out4Immigration: What are you working on now?

Michelle: I am working on some poems right now, thanks to a grant from the Marten Bequest Travelling Scholarships, and also some non-fiction. I am looking forward to settling into the next long project. First, though, I’m focused on some upcoming travel this summer to the Tin House Writers’ Workshop in Portland, Oregon; and the amazing writer’s retreat Hedgebrook, on Whidbey Island in Washington.

Out4Immigration:
Thanks, Michelle! Readers looking to purchase a copy of Ghost Wife, should visit Amazon.com, where it is available for Kindle. Other digital sources can be found at the book's publisher Black Inc. For those living in Australia or New Zealand, you can visit your local bookstore to purchase Ghost Wife in print.

Wednesday, June 05, 2013

Immigration Options for Binational Couples after DOMA: Free Seminar, June 8 in San Francisco

There will be a free seminar this Saturday, June 8 in San Francisco from 10am-12noon at the SF LGBT Community Center, 1800 Market Street, Rm 301, San Francisco.

You must RSVP to info@mccownevans.com or (415) 834-9123 to attend.

The seminar will be recorded for viewing later, but if you are in the Bay Area, please come in person and meet others from Out4Immigration.

The seminar will be conduced by attorneys Kelly McCown and Jeptha Evans -- long-time supporters of our cause and Out4Immigration.

Kelly and Jeptha will discuss the impact on LGBT immigration if DOMA is struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court in a decision expected by late June, as well as the major benefits to same sex binational couples that would result, including green cards based on marriage, fiancé visas, and more.  Participants will:
  • Learn how same-sex binational couples will benefit after DOMA
  • Know the requirements for fiancé visas or marriage-based green cards
  • Understand the differences between applying in the U.S. and abroad
The seminar is free, but RSVP is required to: info@mccownevans.com or (415) 834-9123. This seminar will also be recorded and the video posted to YouTube for later viewing.  For additional information, please see www.mccownevans.com and go to News Updates or visit the Out4Immigration blog at: http://out4immigration.blogspot.com/2013/06/immigration-options-for-binational.html.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

Keep Up with All the News Stories on Same-Sex Binationals and Immigration Reform

The news is happening faster than we can keep up with it on this blog. We try to get stories up that affect us as quickly as possible, particularly surrounding our exclusion from the immigration reform bill that has now moved out of committee and to the Senate floor.

If you do not see the latest news when you arrive here, please click to our new curation site: "United by Love, Divided by Law."

Our volunteer communications person, Kathy, has been tracking stories on this site for over a year, so you will find a very detailed backlog of the history of our march toward immigration rights and marriage equality - both of which will create a path to green cards for gay and lesbian Americans with foreign spouses.

Out4Immigration Marches in Long Beach Pride

by Ryan Johnson

We marched just days before the Senate Judiciary Committee voted to keep us out of the immigration reform bill. Now, more than ever, all who are affected by this issue, need to come out to events like this one to show that we matter.


On Sunday, May 19, in Long Beach, California, there were seven of us marching down to raise awareness about discrimination against same-sex binational couples. I had originally intended simply to march with the contingent, but when I found out that no one was organizing, I stepped in to make it happen. 
 
It was a big challenge recruiting people to participate, despite the large crowds that came out for the parade. After contacting some LGBT organizations in the Orange County and Long Beach areas, and posting on social networks, I had to get so grassroots that I begged my family to come out and march with me. Luckily, we were joined by Bob and Orlando, two long-time Out4Immigration volunteers, who have been struggling within the system to stay together for 21 years. Orlando recently got US citizenship, and we’re all very happy for them. 
 
We arrived at 9:30am, found our line up location, and waited for the parade to begin. Bob had this to say:
 
The day started out a bit cloudy but by the time the parade started the sun was shining, so we knew it was going to be a great march. Now, Orlando and I have marched in a number of pride events including those in West Hollywood, Palm Springs and Long Beach. We've done the beach event at least four times but this one was definitely the best. The crowds raved as we passed by with a lot of people high fiving. When it was all over we wanted to go back and do it again. I think our cause resonated with our compatriots. And we made some new friends with Ryan's family and his partner Louis. 
 
The response from the crowd was definitely appreciated. Once people read our banner, they would erupt in loud cheers of support. My partner was busy taking pictures of us and the crowds. He mentioned that my sister and her new husband were especially popular among the crowds.

This was the first Pride event my mother has ever attended, and her first experience was to march it! She enjoyed the music, the colorful people, and the roaring masses. It was also the first Pride event for my new brother-in-law.  He was a bit tired in the morning, but the crowds really enlivened him with their interest in his physique stickers! 
 
We were all impressed that despite our contingent’s small size, the spectators reassured us that our presence was valued. As we turned the corner and left the crowds behind, we rolled up the banner, removed the stickers from our bodies, and congratulated each other for a march well done. The support is there - so I encourage you to take role in organizing a contingent for your local Pride parade. After the events of this week, we need to make ourselves visible at every opportunity.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

VIDEO: MoveOn Video Encourages Support for Comprehensive Immigration Reform



The video, which features Amos Lim, Out4Immigration's Director of Community Outreach, also notes that there are flaws with the bill as written, namely the plan to exclude LGBT families.

Friday, May 17, 2013

Our Story: Ashlee & Ky

"The worst part is the ever present fear that lingers in our minds."


Ky and I met early in 2004 as undergraduate students at Purdue. I can still remember that first night; we spoke long into the night (rather, I mostly listened because I was shy). From then on Ky’s been in my heart and on my mind, despite my many attempts to eject her from my life.

See, the price of loving Ky was my identity, my lifestyle, and my family. I was raised in a fundamentalist, separatist Christian denomination which had a lot of rules. No sports, no jewelry, no dancing, no joining the military, no going to movies, no taking communion at other churches, no dating, definitely no dating someone of the same sex!

Though leaving that life behind and forging a new one without any support was tremendously difficult, I can say with no hesitation that bringing Ky into my life was the best thing God could have done for me. Together, Ky and I have overcome many obstacles and differences. Aside from unsupportive families and friends, we held different religious and cultural beliefs. I was a devout Christian, and she was skeptical about my religion. I am an American from a quiet town in a fly-over state; she is Chinese and grew up in third world Paraguay. As a child (even into adulthood) my parents had me on a short leash; her parents moved away when she was nine leaving her with guardians who gave her free rein. On personality tests, our scores land us on opposite ends of the personality spectrum.

While we have prevailed over a lot, we are still threatened by our unstable future here in the US. Our path this far hasn’t been easy. Because Ky is not American, and we are not granted the same rights as heterosexuals - the right to obtain a federally recognized marriage - all our major and many minor life decisions have hinged on our inability to secure a green card for Ky. We’ve uprooted twice following student and work visas around the country, which is a huge financial, emotional, and social disruption. I worked to provide for our family when Ky was prohibited by law to hold a job, and we lived on a single income against our wishes (and to Ky’s dismay).

Ky felt like a prisoner inside of our borders, refusing to leave the country for nearly eight years for fear of not being allowed reentry. She did not see her parents and two brothers during that time. She missed saying goodbye to her grandmother on her deathbed. She missed the funerals of two grandparents, the birth and first year of her only niece, and her own brother’s wedding. Additionally, we were unable to fulfill our dream of traveling internationally and discovering the world.

But the worst part is the ever present fear that lingers in our minds. During every step of this immigration nightmare, we worry that we will soon need to find another country to move our lives to. Ky just barely secured the money to enroll in school for her second student visa (it was a miracle really). Only after desperation and begging did she find someone to hire her during her Optional Practical Training. Another miracle landed her a job which granted her a work visa (which she received just days before the H1 B cap was reached). We have managed averting deportation and self exile, but only barely; we have not managed to avoid the emotional toll this process has inflicted.

We realize we are the lucky ones, as far as same-sex binational couples go, and we feel fortunate. But we don’t want this struggle to define our entire lives, and we are tired of putting our lives on hold. We want equality so we can live free, breathe easy, and achieve our dreams.

Are you a same-sex binational couple? Do you have families / friends affected by this issue?
Please contact us at http://bit.ly/O4ICountMeIn if you are interested in sharing your story.  

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Don't Just ASK for CHANGE - DEMAND IT!



ALERT: All same-sex binational couples and allies. We need you to take to your phones, email and social media accounts and make sure every Senator who is debating our inclusion in immigration reform be made aware that we are not asking them to consider including us. We are DEMANDING it.

Talking points:

  •  Immigration reform is NOT comprehensive unless ALL families are included. That means LGBT families, specifically, same-sex binational couples.
  • Including same-sex binationals in immigration reform IS NOT redefining marriage. Same-sex marriage is LEGAL in 12 states, the District of Columbia and 15 countries.
  • Adding some 36,000 same-sex binationals to immigration reform WILL NOT kill the bill. What will kill this bill is hate and bigotry. 

Pick up your phones, fire up your email, stoke your social media and contact the following – not once, but as often as you can. If you are using Twitter, tag your tweets #binatlgbt

Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-CA)
Phone: 202-224-3841 (DC)
310-914-7300 (Los Angeles office)
415-393-0707 (San Francisco office)
Twitter: @SenFeinsetin
Additional phone numbers, email and snail mail contact: http://www.feinstein.senate.gov/public/
 
Key message: Sen. Feinstein insists that she is a champion for gays and lesbians. To her credit she did not vote for the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and supports the repeal of that law. However, she insists that same-sex binational couples be legally married before we can be included in immigration reform. Same-sex marriage, though, is currently AGAINST the law in Sen. Feinstein’s own state! Senator Feinstein has often linked her gay rights cred to being the one who found Harvey Milk’s body after he was assassinated at San Francisco City Hall in 1978. We ask the Senator, “What would Harvey do?” for same-sex binationals if he were still alive? We think he’d be taking a leadership position – and that’s what we want Senator Feinstein to do.

Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY)
Phone:  202-224-6542 (DC)
212-486-4430 (NY)
Twitter: @ChuckSchumer
Additional phone numbers, email and snail mail contact: http://www.schumer.senate.gov/

Key message: Sen. Schumer, another long-time champion for LGBT rights, is waffling on supporting our inclusion in immigration reform. In fact, he is so troubled about letting down his Republican cohorts in the Gang of 8, he claims to be LOSING SLEEP over his vote about whether or not to include us! Our message to him, via Twitter has been:  Losing sleep over gays in #CIR? @ChuckSchumer 40,000 same-sex binationals don't sleep well either. Vote yes on Leahy amendments. #binatLGBT

Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT)
Phone: 202-224-4242
Twitter: @SenatorLeahy
Additional phone numbers, email and snail mail contact: http://www.leahy.senate.gov/

Key message: Sen. Leahy has introduced two amendments to the immigration reform bill currently being debated. Amendments 6 and 7 call for including language from the Uniting American Families Act (UAFA) and recognizing same-sex binational couples who are legally married for immigration purposes. We need all 10 Democrats on the House Judiciary Committee to vote YES on these amendments. Thank Senator Leahy for including us. Encourage his colleagues to vote YES on the Leahy amendments – or YES on amendments 6 and 7 in CIR.

Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL)
Phone: 202-224-2152
Twitter: @SenatorDurbin
Additional phone numbers, email and snail mail contact: http://www.durbin.senate.gov/public/

Key message: Sen. Durbin says he supports LGBT rights and marriage equality. If that’s the case, then voting YES on the Leahy amendments to include same-sex binationals in immigration reform should be a matter of course.

Other Democratic Senators on the Judiciary committee include:

Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) Twitter: @SenWhitehouse / Add’l contact info: http://www.whitehouse.senate.gov/  

Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) Twitter: @amyklobuchar / Add’l contact info: http://www.klobuchar.senate.gov/

Al Franken (D-MN) Twitter: @alfranken / Add’l contact info: http://www.franken.senate.gov/

Chris Coons (D-DE) Twitter: @SenCoonsOffice / Add’l contact info: http://www.coons.senate.gov/


Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) Twitter: @SenBlumenthal  / Add’l contact info: https://www.blumenthal.senate.gov/



Note: These five Senators all come from MARRIAGE EQUALITY states. They are representatives of thousands of married gay and lesbian couples, and of course, same-sex binational couples.

The final Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee is Sen. Mazie Hirono (D-HI). While she is not from a marriage equality state, she does support marriage equality. Twitter: @maziehirono / Add’l contact info:  http://www.hirono.senate.gov/

Key message to all of the above: Please vote YES on Senator Leahy’s amendments 6 and 7 to the immigration reform bill. Immigration reform is NOT comprehensive unless it includes ALL families. Same-sex binational couples NEED your support. 

And – if you are tweeting this, tag your tweets #binatlgbt

The Republicans – While we do not have much hope for getting YES votes out of any on the Judiciary committee, we are TIRED of their demeaning talk and their blustering that our inclusion will kill the bill. That is the message THEY are sending out to the American public and we NEED to turn it back on them.

Same-sex binationals WILL NOT kill immigration reform. Hate and bigotry will. 

And Senators Graham and Flake, two members of the Gang of 8 who are on the Judiciary committee need to hear from YOU.

Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC)
Phone:  202-224-5972 (DC)
Twitter: @GrahamBlog
Additional phone numbers, email and snail mail contact: http://www.lgraham.senate.gov/public/

Key message: Sen. Graham is the one leading the charge against us, saying that our inclusion in the bill will derail it. He accuses those who want to add same-sex binationals to the bill as “redefining marriage”. Funny, coming from a guy who has never been married! Be respectful, though. Tell Senator Graham to STOP redefining COMPREHENSIVE. STOP demeaning our families. DO the RIGHT thing and include ALL FAMILIES in immigration reform. And – as a long shot, remind him that we are talking about denying tax-paying AMERICAN CITIZENS the right to live in their own country.

Senator Jeff Flake (R-AZ)
Phone: 202-224-4521 (DC)
602-840-1891 (AZ)
Twitter:  @JeffFlake
Additional phone numbers, email and snail mail contact: http://www.flake.senate.gov/public/

Key message: As a member of the Gang of 8, along with his cohort Sen. Lindsey Graham, Sen. Flake has committed to keeping us OUT of immigration reform. Tell him his bill is NOT comprehensive if it does not include ALL families. Remind him that by not includeing same-sex binationals in immigration reform he is DENYING tax-paying AMERICAN CITIZENS the right to live in their own country.

Remember, you DO NOT have to live in these jurisdictions to contact these Senators. Although their staff may tell you differently, be POLITE, but FIRM. 

YOUR FAMILY hangs in the balance of the votes these lawmakers are about to cast. If you cannot get through on the PHONE or EMAIL, taking to Twitter or sending a letter via snail mail is just as good. In fact, in some cases it may turn out to be even more POWERFUL.

Thanks to our social media savvy volunteers who continue to post VITAL contact information. This document could not have been put together so quickly without your contributions.