MIAMI (AP) Three immigrant advocates on a hunger strike to pressure lawmakers to change America's immigration system ended their three-week fast Tuesday on the National Mall, while a new group of fasters including U.S. Rep. Joseph Kennedy III took their place.
About half a dozen Congress members, including House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, were there as the fasters left the tent Tuesday. Minnesota Democratic U.S. Reps. Keith Ellison and Betty McCollum began one-day solidarity fasts with the activists.
Immigration advocates in a handful of cities around the United States also announced their own fasts in solidarity with those in Washington. Nearly a dozen activists in central and South Florida embarked on one-day fasts, as did groups in California and Oregon.
On Tuesday, Maria Rodriguez, head of the Florida Immigrant Coalition in Miami, posted a picture of herself on Twitter with a sign reading "I fast for Immigration Reform In Solidarity with D.C. fasters" and urged others to do the same.
In Bakersfield, California, activists kicked off "11 days for 11 million" a fast referencing the estimated number of people living in America illegally. In Vista, California, immigrant advocates and religious leaders planned a 24-hour fast outside Republican U.S. Rep. Darrell Issa's office. Staff at the nonprofit Coalition for Human Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles also joined a 24-hour liquid fast.