As Americans, we believe in honoring the rule of law — and in honoring the dignity of every person. Our current immigration system fails on both counts.
Yes, we’ve made progress in securing the border and funding enforcement. That is good and necessary. But border security alone doesn’t fix a system that is outdated, inconsistent, and often inhumane. The people caught inside — immigrants, employers and communities — are paying the price.
Let’s get this straight: Immigration reform is not just a political issue. It is a moral one. I talk to many Christians who recognize the moral weight of issues like abortion, yet dismiss immigration as merely political. That’s a mistake.
For decades, states, courts and administrations from both parties have scrambled to patch holes in the system. In th