<p></p>
<p>Immigrant Rights activist are currently participating in the fifth annual immigrant march, in the hopes of educating the public about the constant death of immigrants along the border and the urgent need for immigration reform.</p>
<p></p>
<p>Grupos de defensa a los derechos de los migrantes, se encuentran realizando ya la quinta Marcha Migrante con la cual buscan llamar la atención pública hacia la muerte de migrantes en su intento de cruzar la frontera y la apremiante necesidad de una reforma migratoria justa y humana.</p>
<p><a href="http://news.feetintwoworlds.org/">Feet in Two Worlds</a></p>
<p> The main Congressional supporter of progressive immigration reform apparently is fed up with President Barack Obama’s lack of action on the issue.</p>
<p></p>
<p> For months, pundits in Washington have been dying to write the obituary for comprehensive immigration reform. Predictably, they’re using (last) Tuesday night’s special election in Massachusetts as a chance to do just that. But what they overlook is that immigration may well be one of the few issues where a bipartisan breakthrough is possible.</p>