Back in the spring, the federal government started mailing stimulus checks to Americans through the CARES Act. The $1,200 payments were meant to help people get through the economic crisis caused by the new coronavirus pandemic 鈥 but the Trump Administration was able to insert a rule in the CARES Act that makes sure about 2 million U.S. citizens do not get that aid.
The reason: they鈥檙e married to non-U.S. citizens who still lack Social Security numbers.
鈥淲hich makes zero sense because that is effectively punishing a U.S. citizen for who they married,鈥 says Clara Discua, a native-born U.S. citizen who needs the stimulus check.
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Discua is a medical assistant who resides in Coral Springs, but she has not been able to work much this year because she would be at high risk if she got infected with COVID-19.
鈥淓xtremely high risk per my doctor because I鈥檓 only two years out of my cancer treatment,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he $1,200 meant me being able to pay my bills.鈥
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Discua says she was penalized for paying her taxes 鈥 that is, paying them jointly with her husband Roberto, a construction subcontractor and an immigrant from Honduras. Their joint tax return exposed Discua鈥檚 marriage to a non-citizen who doesn't have a Social Security number; and the CARES Act denies the stimulus aid not just to that non-U.S. citizen spouse but the U.S. citizen spouse too.
It represents to me that they don't think all citizens are equal. 鈥 Clara Discua
Discua says that rule is doubly insulting to her because her son is a National Guard veteran who was disabled during the war in Afghanistan.
鈥淚t represents to me,鈥 she says, 鈥渢hat they don鈥檛 think that all citizens are equal.鈥
That impression 鈥 that Americans married to immigrants are somehow lesser U.S citizens 鈥 also bothers Florida Senator Marco Rubio. He said as much during a recent Zoom conference hosted by the Immigration Partnership and Coalition Fund () in Coral Gables.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 actually illegal, it鈥檚 unconstitutional,鈥 Rubio said. 鈥淯.S. citizens are all entitled to the same protections 鈥 It鈥檚 one of those things that you could probably win in court one day. But it鈥檇 be a lot easier to just fix it with a law that makes it clear, and that鈥檚 what we intend to do.鈥
ANTI-IMMIGRANT BASE
Rubio is a Republican who often supports President Trump. But this summer he , the , that would get rid of the marriage punishment rule Trump worked into the CARES Act.
Discua and others are pushing more senators to support the bill 鈥 including Florida Republican Sen. Rick Scott, who has expressed his concerns about the marriage punishment but has not yet publicly backed Rubio鈥檚 legislation.
鈥淣ot only does U.S. citizens being punished not make sense morally or economically, but also politically,鈥 says IMPAC Executive Director Kathy Bird Carvajal. 鈥淚n polling that was , 91 percent of all voters 鈥 and 84 percent of Republicans 鈥 support all U.S. citizens receiving a stimulus payment regardless of who they鈥檙e married to.鈥
But Bird Carvajal says she fears the rule was really meant to appeal to Trump鈥檚 anti-immigrant political base 鈥 because it further stigmatizes immigrants. Especially Latin American immigrants like Discua鈥檚 husband Roberto. Latin Americans are thought to make up the majority of immigrants married to U.S. citizens.
Roberto asked that is last name not be used because he is still adjusting his immigration status after marrying Discua in his hometown of San Pedro Sula, Honduras 鈥 where she was living at the time. They moved to the U.S. to escape San Pedro Sula鈥檚 horrific gang violence. Roberto鈥檚 brother was murdered there because he refused to comply with a street gang鈥檚 extortion orders.
鈥淏ut now I feel very guilty because I鈥檓 the one who鈥檚 keeping my wife from getting the benefits she needs after surviving cancer,鈥 Roberto said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think that鈥檚 fair of any government.鈥
Aside from the feelings of guilt, other immigrants married to U.S. citizens say the rule seems more in line with the authoritarian governments they left behind.
鈥淚t feels a lot like the kind of spiteful measures we see the socialist dictatorship in Venezuela take against its opponents,鈥 says Mariem Martos, an electrical engineer from San Crist贸bal, Venezuela, who married a U.S. citizen here in South Florida after escaping her country鈥檚 epic humanitarian disaster.
Martos鈥 wife, Kim Liu, came here 16 years ago from the Dominican Republic and today is a U.S. citizen. She and Martos live in Doral and the pandemic forced her for now to close her acupuncture clinic in Coral Gables. Like so many Floridians, Liu has had trouble getting state unemployment aid. Then she found out she can鈥檛 get the federal stimulus check because she鈥檚 married to a non-citizen.
鈥淚 was shocked and offended,鈥 Liu says. 鈥淚鈥檝e been paying U.S. taxes since 2004. I thought, y'know, once I became a U.S. citizen in case of an emergency I could probably use some of what I鈥檝e been paying all these years. And I feel helpless.鈥
She and almost 2 million other U.S. citizens hope Sen. Rubio鈥檚 bill will bring them something helpful for a change to get them through this pandemic.