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The Daily Cardinal Est. 1892
Tuesday, April 23, 2024
Protesters are asking the university to protect undocumented members of the UW-Madison community after the election of Donald Trump as president last week.

Protesters are asking the university to protect undocumented members of the UW-Madison community after the election of Donald Trump as president last week.

As undocumented students ask for university protections, legislators clash over policy

While undocumented students proactively fight to secure university protection from deportation as the president-elect’s inauguration approaches, state legislators are divided on how to move forward.

Though not officially a sanctuary city, Madison’s police department follows a resolution passed by common council in 2010 discouraging MPD officers from reporting undocumented people to immigration officers, except in instances of violent crime.

After a presidential campaign that emphasized deportation and wall-building, anxieties continue to rise for undocumented students as Trump gets closer to the Oval Office.

A letter to university administration urging protection for students, staff and their families by making the campus a sanctuary for the undocumented has gained 4,500 signatures.

Mike Mikalsen, chief of staff for state Sen. Steve Nass, R-Whitewater, asserted the president-elect’s deportation plan will focus on criminals. “People should take a deep breath and wait to see what the new administration is going to do with regards to [undocumented] students.”

Nass co-authored a bill to ban sanctuary cities in the city earlier this year.

Laura P. Minero, a graduate student at UW-Madison and a co-author of the letter, said that it’s clear any actions taken by Trump “would be discriminatory, would be unfounded, would be based in xenophobia.”

Whether criminal or not, Minero believes “if someone in our community is at risk then we are all at risk.”

State Sen. Fred Risser, D-Madison, a supporter of sanctuary cities, said in an email statement that he is “consulting with [the state’s] legislative council regarding if it is in the power of the University to declare itself a sanctuary campus and therefore develop protocols.”

Undocumented students are no different than other students, Minero stressed, and must not be excluded from the diverse community UW-Madison commits to protect and serve. No change in legislation, she believes, should jeopardize a tuition-paying student’s ability to study.

“[I]n its capacity, the University should make efforts to ensure that everyone feel welcome and safe on campus,” said Risser.

The UW-Madison community, claimed Mikalsen, is “simply out of touch with where the rest of the state is and [doesn’t] represent the views of the hardworking people of Wisconsin.”

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