| I blogged a few weeks ago about the need for media types to smoke out the views of state politicians on federal immigration reform.
So it was good to see extensive local coverage of a bipartisan initiative by Sen. Michael Bennet laying out the broadest of principles for immigration reform, like the humanitarian notion that U.S. immigration policy should "prioritize" keeping families together. That is, "where possible."
The "where possible" caveat symbolizes the document, called the "Colorado Compact." If the call to "prioritize" wasn't sufficiently vague, it had to be clouded further with the phrase "where possible." And there's no comment on whether immigrant families should be kept together in the U.S. or deported juntos.
Top to bottom, the document is void of details, like how big a fence might be built, if a path to citizenship is essential, and if immigrant kids can get Pell grants, much less the same college-tuition rates offered to American-born kids.
The document calls for a "path forward for immigrants," but not much in the rubber-hits-the-road category.
That's fine for a broad community effort, like the Colorado Compact.
But journalists should be focused on specifics.
That's what pissed me off about most of the news coverage of the Compact. (See a compilation of news coverage on the Colorado Compact's website here.) It was gushing, mostly without any skeptical edge that you want from reporters. |