VOA
07 Nov 2016, 23:07 GMT+10
The two sisters, along with nearly 2 million more in the African diaspora, are one of the fastest growing immigrant groups in the country. As new citizens, they understand the impact of their participation in November's elections on the future of U.S. policy.
Bosompel, for her part, feels strongly that this election's candidates should lead the country by example by paying their share of taxes, a not-so-subtle jab at Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump, who claimed during the first U.S. presidential debate at Hofstra University that avoiding taxes 'makes me smart.'
'So we are the ones that are stupid paying the taxes?' Bosompel asked. 'No, that's supposed to be equal. When you make more money, you pay more taxes. When you make less money, you pay less money.'
Bosompel insists she doesn't have anything against Trump, but lauds Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton's experience as a politician.
The sisters both hope that whomever is sworn in will address their top concerns, including economic and racial justice.
'If they punish [law enforcement], they will think twice before pulling a gun,' said Bosempel, referencing the recent cases of police shootings of unarmed black men in the U.S. 'It doesn't have to happen to your family member to see how it feels.'
Safety-net programs
Sub-Saharan African immigrants in the U.S. are among both the highest educated and poorest in the country, according to the Migration Policy Institute.
Research done in 2013 suggests they are more likely to live in poverty - 20 percent - than the overall foreign-born and native-born population, 19 and 15 percent, respectively.
To assist communities in need of greater public funding, organizations such as the Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) educates and encourages immigrant communities to organize and effect change on issues of racial, social and economic justice.
Carl Lipscombe, Programs Manager at BAJI, says access to safety net programs is crucial for the diaspora community as a whole.
'African communities still face an uphill battle to obtain work authorization, to obtain equal employment, to be lifted out of poverty,' Lipscombe said.
Lipscombe argues that the state and local races across the country are even more consequential to day-to-day lives than the presidential race.
'They are the ones voting on whether or not the police force gets more money or whether education is funded, whether housing is funded, where affordable housing is built,' he said. 'The average person will never meet Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump, but they can walk right into their local councilperson's office.'
A unified electorate
By becoming more involved in the political process, naturalized citizens play a greater role in influencing issues that impact immigrants, such as comprehensive immigration reform.
Historian Mamadou Diouf, who teaches African Studies at Columbia University, says African communities in New York are a prime example of how to 'Americanize.'
'If you become an elected resource, you are able to negotiate your place within the system,' Diouf said.
Among both citizens and newly arrived immigrants, Diouf claims that the African diaspora population often 'stays together.' The result, he says, is a unified political network that achieves change within the community.
'For the documented ones, it's also their ways of protecting the non-documented, their ways of being able to negotiate, and elections are crucial for voiced negotiation,' Diouf added.
It's that very mindset that Deandra Harris, a cashier at Gold Coast Trading Company - a West African goods market based in the Bronx, New York - takes with her to the polls.
'If you do not vote, you're kind of just giving your vote away to whomever does,' said Harris. 'Especially for the people that's not able to vote, you need to vote and be the voice for those people.'
Even when the choices for president are not perfect, he says there is only one condition that truly matters.
'Whether you can deliver. That is what we should be thinking of,' Imobhio said. 'Nobody is perfect. We have two candidates that are not perfect, so we should single one out.'
The basis of his decision for president is one shared by many foreign-born Americans: Who is better prepared to earn respect from the international community, and provide opportunities for others to achieve the American Dream?
For Imobhio, who travels frequently to his native Nigeria, the next president must be able to retain the world's respect. 'Persuasion, persuasion,' he said. 'Good relationships can achieve any goal.'
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