In this photo taken Oct. 16, 2014, community resource worker Margo Ebersole, right, talks with clients outside the Rural Communities Resource Center where she works in the small rural town of Yuma in eastern Colorado. This farming hamlet of 3,200 near the Nebraska border is home to an increasing number of Latino immigrants drawn to work in the nearby corn and hog farms. Yuma is the hometown of Republican U.S. Rep. Cory Gardner, one of the GOP's current hopes for seizing the Senate back from Democrats. (AP Photo/Brennan Linsley)

YUMA | Andrea Hermosillo rode for hours to protest at her neighbor’s office.

The high school junior lives only a few blocks from GOP Senate candidate Cory Gardner in Yuma, a small town on Colorado’s high plains.

But this summer, Hermosillo went to the congressman’s main office, in a city closer to Denver in Gardner’s sprawling eastern Colorado district, for a sit-in to demand that he support granting citizenship to many of the 11 million people living in the U.S. illegally.

“It was kind of weird, but it felt we had to be there,” Hermosillo said. “It’s important he know that it’s people in his town who feel this way.”

Bill Breithauer also lives in Yuma. The 72-year-old retired farmer has known Gardner since the two-term congressman was a child.

As Breithauer nursed a coffee at Yuma’s central gathering spot, a restaurant called The Main Event, he made it clear that he thinks what Hermosillo wants is an outrage.

“How are they going to give them citizenship if they don’t speak the language and they’re up to no good?” Breithauer asked. “Cory’s all right. He knows what’s what.”

This is the riddle for Gardner in his race against Democratic Sen. Mark Udall in the only state among the dozen or so in play this year with both a competitive Senate race and a sizable population of Hispanic voters.

Yuma is Colorado in a microcosm.

The town, like the state, has been transformed by Latin American immigrants who have arrived to open businesses, labor in fields and hog farms, and take seats in public school classrooms.

They have been welcomed — the Yuma town council in 2010 urged Congress to pass the kind of legislation Hermosillo demands — and met with suspicion.

Udall has called on President Barack Obama to limit deportations of people living illegally in the U.S., and he voted for a Senate bill that eventually would have granted them citizenship.

Gardner has straddled the fence.

He opposes the Senate bill, but speaks warmly of immigrants. It’s an indication of how he has been shaped by his town and his place in a party where supporting an immigration overhaul is a political risk.

Gardner regularly tells a story of meeting a high school valedictorian who was waiting tables at a small-town diner in his district. He told her she had a bright future; she told him she was brought into the country illegally and couldn’t go to college.

The following year, Gardner passed through the town again. The girl was still there, still waiting tables.

“If you’re looking at the way our criminal justice system works, we don’t charge a 2-year-old or a 3-year-old with the same crime as adults,” Gardner said. “I have known them for a very long time, whether it’s just the people I’ve gotten to know through living in the community or its people my daughter goes to school with.”

Yet Gardner opposed legislation that would have let those young immigrants live in the U.S. legally. He did change course this summer and voted against efforts to repeal a program that lets some who came to the U.S. illegally as children stay in the country.

He has called for increased border security, a guest worker program and citizenship for people brought here illegally who serve in the military, but hasn’t gotten more specific.

“Cory Gardner has made the calculation that he can say a few nice things, fool enough voters and get away with this,” said Patty Kupfer of America’s Voice, which supports the Senate bill.

Udall has hammered Gardner on the issue, even though in 2005, when immigration played less favorably in Colorado, Udall voted for a Republican bill that would have made being in the country illegally a felony.

“He’s said we should take immigration reform in steps,” Udall said at a recent debate. “Well, he hasn’t taken one step to move immigration to the finish line.”

Gardner’s combination of warmth and hesitation make sense at The Main Event in Yuma, a town of 3,200 that began to change in the 1990s as Mexicans from Nicolas Bravo, in northern Chihuahua state, were drawn by the area’s new hog farms and dairies.

On a recent morning, half-a-dozen longtime friends grumbled about the amount of Spanish they hear and the idea people can enter the country illegally. But they acknowledged that local businesses depend on immigrants and that most of the town’s new residents, legal or not, are good people.

Said Bob Seward, 88, “Yuma would look like a ghost town without the Spanish or Mexican people here.”

Yuma’s immigrants have lobbied Gardner for years.

In 2005, Margo Ebersole held a meeting for teenage girls at a community center. Though Ebersole expected to talk birth control, the girls wanted to discuss college. Under state law at the time, they could not win scholarships to public universities and had to pay higher, out-of-state tuition if they were living in the country illegally.

The girls called themselves Las Estrellas — The Stars, in Spanish — and have set about trying to win over the town. Gardner always seemed sympathetic, said Navil Babonoyaba, 16. She followed Gardner to town halls and tried to pin him down, writing questions on notecards so she was prepared.

“He would answer them, but not directly,” she said. “He’d try to go around them.”

Ebersole sees Gardner at church, but also hasn’t had any luck.

In a private meeting with Gardner, she told him of how her husband, who came to the U.S. illegally as a child, had to return to Mexico and missed the birth of their second child.

“He can be really nice and polite and agreeable, but not where we wish he could be,” Ebersole said.

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Follow Nicholas Riccardi on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/nickriccardi

6 replies on “Cory Gardner’s town shapes immigration view inside Colorado senatorial election”

  1. I’m sick and tired of these illegals acting like they have rights. They only have rights of foreigners on our soil. Nothing more. Kick em out and be done with it.

    1. The people mentioned in this article are not “illegals”, as you put it, John. They are United States of America citizens. I don’t know where you live but I’d like to see our agricultural, resort, health care and service industries working when you “kick em out”.

      1. True some are US citizens, congrats to those who took the proper steps to become citizens of this great country. I wish them healthy and prosperous lives. To hell with those that are illegal and leach off our system and the back of US citizens.

    1. Not so. Not until they do it legally. I agree that our immigration laws need some work, but they are still on the books, have been somewhat enforced until the 1970-80 period, when Teddy Kennedy advocated Amnesty for 3,000,000 illegals, promising our borders would be secured, and we would never have that problem again. His promise was a typical Liberal one. And this administration has practiced open borders, though they claim deporting more than ever. HA HA. Rejecting some at the border, or releasing violators from jail or prison is not deportation. And check out the killing of policemen this week of Illegal using multiple names, and having been deported several times. On the news and on the net this weekend. Just like the one that DA Ritter, gave agricultural trespass – pat on the wrist, and he went to California, raped a young girl and killed her.

  2. As I posted elsewhere when this same subject came up, I support legal immigration, through the proper channels. I also do not support and never will support illegal immigration , breaking the laws of this country. My ancestors came here legally starting in 1800, indenturing themselves to pay passage, and all of their descendants are legal. I have Pilipino, Japanese, Chinese, German, Polish, Welch, Scotch, and probably Indian and Blacks in my family tree, with some of those living now. I lived between two houses in Aurora in 2006-2008 era, one occupied by 13 bachelors (20 to 30 years of age from Sonora, Mexico). They had no intentions of becoming citizens, only one spoke English, and they trashed the house next to me. Brought sales value (and appraisal down from $186,000 in 2006-2008, to $89,000) which it sold for as fixer-upper with water and electric meters bypassed, had destroyed front and back lawns with cars parked on them. When I emailed zoning, 5 officers showed up, wrote violations, and they moved. House set vacant until sold in 2008. Buyer rebuilt house inside, restored lawns, doors, windows replaced furnace they had sold for scrap, and all carpeting, painting, after new drywall installed.
    Other house had family who applied for citizenship, was buying their house, had 2 small children and with illegal immigration making it difficult to get or keep jobs, with economy down, got behind couple months. Lender would not work with them, foreclosed on them and did some cosmetic things to house after renting to them until December, and sold house for $150,000 in January 2014. My house next door, worth $186,000 sale price at the time (2006-08) appraised value too, dropped to $92,000 even though I paid $28,000 for new roof, new furnace, new doors and windows, and painted house, with additional building. Now has increased to $106,500 as of 2012. But houses in our part of Aurora are all below 2006-08 values, though some are increasing. But slowly.
    And another reason I am angry about this. That neighbor had younger brother and 2 uncles assassinated in Mexico where they were small business operators, while driving in one car, with guns of caliber sold by FAST and FURIOUS to the drug cartels couple years ago. That family was doing it right, and got rolled over, though they contacted different agencies, and Administration was supposed to help them. But they got nothing of help from Colorado or Federal, though they tried to comply with our laws.
    NO, I OPPOSE ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION, BREAKING OF OUR LAWS, AND THE ONES WHO BROKE THOSE LAWS, ARE THE REASON THEIR CHILDREN ARE HAVING PROBLEMS NOW. Comply with laws, do it legally, learn the language, and become American Citizens. My granddaughter’s grandfather was born in Mexico, became Naturalized many years ago, now deceased, and he refused being called Latino, Spanish, Hispanic. He was proud American, of Mexican Descent. His wife was from Hawaii, before it became a state, and more enjoyable couple, who fit in with everyone was to be admired, and emulated. Both are deceased now, but had same feelings I have expressed here.
    Also, Rep. Bob Beauprez and I stood in parking lot of a Commerce City Restaurant following a townhouse meeting few years ago, when a very distinguished Mexican gentleman (about 65 ?) stood with tears in his eyes as he asked Bob to ensure that all who emigrate here, come legally, though he still had friends and relatives in Mexico who wanted to come. We had heard from attorney who represent immigrants inside, with some discussion, and I spoke of my family connections and reasons.

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