[Correction: When we first published this blog post, we mistakenly identified Ju Hong as part of a group protesting at Obama’s campaign headquarters in Oakland. Hong wasn’t part of that protest nor was he at the campaign headquarters. We regret the error. This blog post has since been corrected.]
Update 2:21 P.M The private security guards who have been watching over the student protestors in Obama's Oakland campaign headquarters are no longer allowing the students to use the restroom. One student, Luis Serrano, left to use the bathroom and was not allowed back into the office. There are now only three students inside.
A group of protesters including several undocumented students walked into President Obama's campaign office in Oakland Thursday afternoon and announced that they weren't leaving until the President changed his policies on deportation.

On Friday morning President Obama did just that. Specifically, the U.S. will no longer deport law-abiding undocumented people who are younger than 30 and came to the U.S. before they were 16. They also need to have lived here for five years, have a high school diploma, be in school or serve in the military. These are many of the same elements of the federal DREAM Act, which Congress did not pass. While the presidents actions are not a direct result of the Oakland demonstration, it has given some renewed vigor.
"Prior to the policy I’d been fearing deportation every single day," said Ju Hong a UC Berkeley graduate. "You know, some other students already got a deportation letter, they probably lost hope, but because of this new policy implementation now they will have opportunities to stay in this country," he continued.