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Minuteman Janet Napolitano |
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The
Status of Immigration Reform
WASHINGTON (By Emile Schepers, PWW)
July 14, 2009
—
Immigration reform of some sort is
underway, but it is running a zigzag
course of small positive moves and
other very negative ones. Labor and
immigrants’ rights organizations are
asking grassroots activism and
pressure be massively increased for
a reform that provides justice to
immigrant workers.
Secretary of Homeland Security Janet
Napolitano was part of the dynamic
of balancing positive, pro-immigrant
steps with negative ones. On the one
hand, she announced she was
withdrawing the Bush-Cheney rules
for the processing of No-Match
letters. These are letters the
Social Security Administration sends
to employers to inform them the
Social Security numbers they
submitted for one or more employees
do not match the information on file
with the SSA." In the past,
employers were supposed to show the
"No Match Letter" to the worker but
the employer was not supposed to use
the information to fire, demote or
otherwise sanction.
President Bush’s Secretary of
Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff,
had issued new rules which required
the employer to fire all recipients
of No-Match letters if they did not
clear up the discrepancy of name and
Social Security within 90 days. This
produced uproar, not least because
the Bush administration did not hire
any new federal employees to handle
the massive extra paperwork
this would have created. The
AFL-CIO, the ACLU and others filed
suit in federal court to stop the
issuing of the Bush-Chertoff
No-Match letters.
The announcement by Ms. Napolitano
she is withdrawing the Bush-Chertoff
rules appears to render that lawsuit
moot, and represents a big victory
for the AFL-CIO and its allies.
However, under Republican
instigation, the Senate adopted an
amendment to the budget for Homeland
Security that forbids Napolitano
from using any of her department’s
money to “change the regulation.”
What actual impact this Senate vote
will have is yet to be seen.
Seen as a setback by the immigrants’
rights movement is Napolitano’s
decision to go ahead with making the
E-Verify system (whereby employers
with government contracts must check
with the government to verify the
authorization to work of new hires)
mandatory starting this fall. The
Senate also jumped into that issue
to make a bad decision worse; they
approved an amendment to the DHS
appropriations bill to allow
employers to use E-Verify to check
up on their existing workforce, not
just new hires. If this gets to be
actual law, it will lead to the
firing of many thousands of workers,
including US citizens in whose files
there are clerical errors, and it
will also give employers more
leverage over workers. Earlier,
Senator Jeff Sessions succeeded add
an amendment to make E-Verify
permanent instead of sunsetting in
three years.
Secretary Napolitano also announced
she was narrowing the focus of the
287 (g) program under which local,
state and other police departments
are authorized by the federal
government to engage in immigration
enforcement activities. These
programs have caused huge injustices
in the communities in which they
have been implemented, because they
have been interpreted by police
authorities as a blank check to go
after people who look like
immigrants, pulling them over for
minor offenses or no offenses at all
and then demanding they prove on the
spot they have a right to be in
the country. This has contributed to
the vast increase in racial and
ethnic profiling by police.
Napolitano is now requiring police
agencies participating in 287 (g)
promise they are going to use this
authority in a manner that focuses
on serious criminals, narcotics
smugglers etc. instead of ordinary
undocumented immigrant workers.
However, Homeland Security continues
to expand the number of police
agencies involved, and it is yet to
be seen if these agencies will now
behave themselves and not use their
federal powers to profile, harass
and persecute people.
The Senate’s messing around with the
issue also involved voting to
require Homeland Security
complete an actual, physical barrier
to along the whole length of the
U.S.-Mexico border, a physical
impossibility. These anti-immigrant
votes were made possible by the fact
a number of Democrats joined with
the Republicans against the majority
of their own party.
Senator Charles Schumer (D-NY), who
appears to be taking the lead in
immigration legislation in the
Senate now that Senator Kennedy is
unable, announced this week Labor
Day (September 7) is his target for
getting an immigration reform bill
before Congress. He listed a series
of principles around which he wants
this bill to be organized. This, too
is a mixed bag of pro and
anti-immigrant items, and is not
nearly as progressive as the
immigration reform proposal which
has been put forward by the AFL-CIO,
Change to Win and most immigrants’
rights groups involved in the
“Reform Immigration FOR America”
initiative (www.reformimmigrationforamerica.org.
)
He starts out defining undocumented
immigration as “wrong” and asserting
we must achieve “operational control
of our borders” to keep the
undocumented out within a year of
enactment of legislation. This
entails more border agents, more
walls, more spotter planes and
electronic gizmos and so forth.
He also calls for a strengthening of
internal controls by means of a
“biometric based employer
verification
–
with tough enforcement and auditing.
What this might actually be is yet
to be explained.
He would have the government order
all undocumented immigrants in the
country to “quickly register their
presence with the United States
Government – and submit to a
rigorous process of converting to
legal status and earning a path to
citizenship – or face imminent
deportation”.
He says getting rid of undocumented
immigration will make a more
generous policy of immigration for
work or for family reunification
possible. Further, U.S. immigration
policy must attract the “best and
brightest” people from the rest of
the world, but he is against
bringing in low skilled workers or
using guest workers to undercut U.S.
workers.
And finally “We must create a system
that converts the current flow of
unskilled undocumented immigrants
into the United States into a more
manageable and controlled flow of
legal immigrants who can be absorbed
by our economy”.
The only progressive pro-immigrant
worker parts of this “immigration
reform” plan are the vague promise
if undocumented immigrants present
themselves to the government as
ordered, they may be given legal
status, and also the part about
avoiding guest worker programs.
That Senator Schumer’s statement was
couched in such anti-immigrant
terminology and contains so many
negative and even dangerous items
suggests even those politicians who
are not actually anti-immigrant are
excessively afraid of the
anti-immigration demagogues in
politics and the media, and are
trying to balance anything they say
that seems generous to undocumented
immigrants with other things that
prove they are “tough on
undocumented immigration.”
This shows how much educational and
lobbying work we have yet to do.
In this and other statements of its
kind by both Republicans and
Democrats, there is no recognition
whatever U.S. trade policies are a
major factor in generating
immigration, that the immigration
comes in undocumented because the
U.S.A. won’t give visas to poor
farmers and blue collar workers, and
the best policy of all would be to
change those policies so decent
jobs can be created in Mexico and
other places whence the undocumented
immigrant flow overwhelmingly comes.
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