Thousands of immigrants marched through cities across the
United States on Thursday, but smaller crowds suggested their
cause had lost momentum in this election year.
Immigration-rights activists have retrenched to focus this
year's rallies on stopping workplace raids after Washington
failed last year to act on reforms that included a path to
legal status for illegal immigrants.
In Los Angeles, an estimated 8,000 people converged on City
Hall. But the numbers were nowhere near the 500,000-strong
showing in March 2006 that caught authorities off-guard and
prompted activists to hail the start of a new civil rights
movement.
"This is a very young country built off immigrants.
The immigrants of yesterday are citizens today, so immigrants
of today should become citizens tomorrow," said Jose
Rodriguez, who came to the United States from Mexico illegally
in 1989 and has since gained permanent residency.
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"The police are deporting immigrants because they have
broken the law but I think there is a higher law and that
is to treat someone in a humane way," said Rodriguez,
42.
In Phoenix, no one turned out to march, in contrast to past
years when central thoroughfares were packed with protesters.
In Tucson, Arizona, a few hundred pro-immigration supporters
walked through the streets carrying placards with messages
such as "Citizenship Yes! Deportation No!" That
fell short of organizers' hopes that several thousand would
attend.
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