(This opinion piece appeared in the Irish Echo, October 31, 2012 )
by Brian O'Dwyer
by Brian O'Dwyer
As is the case every four years, Irish Americans find
themselves facing a difficult decision on election day, November 6.
Once again, there are two candidates with two very different
visions for the future of the United
States and for Irish-American relations.
Between the many attack ads and campaign commercials that seemingly never stop
on television, many Irish Americans have probably been left wondering the same
question, “which candidate should Irish America stand behind – Governor Mitt
Romney or President Barack Obama?”
When one examines each candidate’s interaction with Ireland
and the Irish-American community and their specific plans, however, the choice
becomes much clearer. President Obama is the only candidate who has shown the
necessary dedication and hard work needed to ensure a thriving Ireland
and prosperous Irish-American relations.
The Obama Administration has also continued to work for
peace in Northern Ireland in the same manner that former President Bill Clinton
had ten years earlier. Along with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, President
Obama has pledged his support for The International Fund for Ireland, which promotes dialogue and discussion
between unionists and nationalists in Northern Ireland.
Seeing as Secretary Clinton has promoted peace in Northern Ireland
for the last ten years, there is no doubt that this level of support will
continue throughout the next Obama administration.
In addition to his foreign policy toward Ireland itself, President Obama can certainly be
praised for his efforts to keep America
out of additional wars in the Middle East.
Irish Americans in the U.S.
military have bravely fought in both Iraq
and Afghanistan,
but no one wants to see them drawn into yet another conflict. By limiting
intervention in Libya and Syria, the
president has ensured that American boots will remain on American soil.
There is good reason that when the citizens of the Republic of Ireland
were polled as to who they would like to be the next President of the United States
they expressed an overwhelming preference for President Obama.
President Obama has also showed his concern for the well
being of Ireland
by visiting there in May 2011. The visit came in the midst of Ireland’s most severe economic
difficulties.
Aside from meeting with the prime minister, the president gave an uplifting
speech to Dubliners, in which he intertwined Gaelic phrases. While one might
counter that a speech should not be significant enough to win the vote of a
people, the trip shows that the Obama administration took the time to visit a
small nation during a pivotal point in its troubles.
In contrast, Governor Romney failed to visit Ireland on his
European campaign trip back in July of this year. While the governor had kind
words for the “special relationship” between the United
States and Great Britain he had little to say
about the “special relationship” that exists between the more than forty
million Irish Americans and their Irish cousins.
The fact that the governor flew over Ireland twice during
his brief foray into foreign policy and did not take the time to stay for a few
hours and show his concern for the Irish economy and the Irish people speaks
volumes as to what four years of a Romney foreign policy would be like.
Aside from that, the Ireland trip also had a deeper
meaning for President Obama since he took the opportunity to visit Moneygall –
a small village to which he can actually trace one of his ancestors. It is an
often overlooked fact that President Obama is himself a member of the Irish
American community whose ancestors came here during the famines of the 19th
century. The overall message of the president to the Irish people can be summed
up in only one line of his, “Your best days are still ahead.”
Governor Romney’s message is profound silence.
President Obama’s domestic policies should be of particular
note to Irish Americans. In short, he supports comprehensive immigration
reform. Governor Romney does not.
Those of us seeking a fair deal for the Irish and an end to
the discriminatory preferences in our nation’s immigration laws know that only
with an Obama victory can we have any chance of correcting the inequities that
single out the Irish for harsh treatment.
This nation was, and continues, to be built on the hard work
of its immigrants, and that sentiment must always be fostered. President Obama
has demonstrated that he still believes in protecting that tradition and does
not want to close the U.S.
borders to those that through hard work and dedication pursue their own
American Dream.
The president has also provided two other very important
factors in those American dreams – fair jobs and health benefits. Irish
Americans and labor rights have always been intimately tied together in the
past, and it still holds true today. Governor Romney would have us believe that
America
is best served by taking care of the wealthiest. President Obama believes that
a strong middle class is best for America’s future. He will
strengthen workers’ rights, not destroy them . As Vice President Biden put it,
under President Obama General Motors is alive and well, and Osama Bin Laden is
not.
When it comes down to the ballot box on election day, every
Irish American has a clear choice in reelecting President Barack Obama. An
Irish American himself, he shares our values, those instilled in us from
childhood.
We believe in hard work and education and we also believe
that each of us has a special responsibility to take care of the poor and
dispossessed; so does he. Those values were emphasized when he visited Ireland.
The president has continued the work before him for peace in
Northern Ireland, an
economically viable Ireland,
and a strong middle class at home.
As election day draws closer, the importance of every
American’s vote cannot be stressed enough, and the voice of every Irish
American must be heard. For a brighter future for both Ireland and America it is absolutely essential
that our president be reelected.
Brian O’Dwyer is a New
York-based attorney, a member of the board of Irish American Democrats, and founder
and chairman of the Emerald
Isle Immigration
Center.
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