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Doors to a building below a sign reading "US Citizenship and Immigration Services"

New Mexico human rights groups promise to defend immigrants against deportation

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Roz Brown

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(New Mexico News Connection) New Mexico immigrant-based and immigrant-serving organizations are developing strategies to defend those workers and their families in the new year.

President-elect Donald Trump has promised the largest deportation of undocumented residents in U.S. history when he takes office in January.

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Map of the state of New Mexico, showing portions of surrounding states

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Marcela Diaz, executive director of the advocacy group Somos Un Pueblo Unido, said immigrant workers, entrepreneurs and consumers are essential to the state's economy. She hopes residents and state lawmakers will take a stand to protect them.

"Demand that our local and state policymakers don't use the money that we are generating for this state, against us by spending very limited public safety resources in helping the Trump administration enforce civil and federal immigration laws," Diaz urged.

Diaz pointed out the state has about 60,000 undocumented immigrants -- 10  percent of the population -- who pay nearly $70 million annually in state and local taxes. They account for 13 percent of the workforce in some industries, including oil and gas. Advocacy groups want lawmakers to consider a bill to provide economic relief for families with children who lose income due to immigration enforcement.

Diaz believes lawmakers need to be proactive when they convene in January. She noted it became clear during the last Trump administration there were not enough experts in New Mexico, particularly in rural areas, to help those trying to obtain citizenship while caught in the deportation process.

"That's primarily because there aren't enough immigration attorneys or low-cost, no-cost legal services in the state of New Mexico," Diaz explained. "That's one of the big asks that we're going to make this year is, spend some of our money in helping us defend our families."

She acknowledged there are a lot of uncertainties about exactly what the Trump administration is going to do in 2025, but emphasized there is already a huge worker shortage in the state and deportations will make matters worse.