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Hope Exists for Immigration
‘Down Payment’
July
29, 2010
By Morton M. Kondracke
Roll Call Executive Editor
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There’s
not a prayer that comprehensive immigration reform will pass Congress this
year, but there’s a slim one that a smaller “down payment”
measure might. And it should.
Many of
the nation’s most important Latino groups, plus Sen. Dianne Feinstein
(D-Calif.), are now pushing passage of a package to legalize undocumented
workers in the farm industry and young people going to college or the military.
What’s
needed now is some concerted leadership — from President Barack Obama,
from Republican presidential wannabes (and maybe former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush)
and business groups — plus some gumption (and simple humanity) on the
part of GOP Senators who have supported immigration reform in the past.
The
problem, of course, is lock step GOP opposition to anything Democrats want to
do — plus a political atmosphere inflamed by Arizona’s effort to
sic its police on illegal immigrants.
Republicans
are fixed on a “border security first” immigration strategy, while
“down payment” involves legalizing the status of about 2 million
undocumented immigrants.
There’s
also resistance in the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, many of whose leaders
fear that passing an agriculture bill now will pull a key group — the
grower lobby — out of the campaign for comprehensive immigration reform.
There’s
also fear that Republicans will try to attach harsh enforcement provisions to
any “down payment” bill.
Still,
it’s worth the effort. “A small, good deal is better than no deal
at all,” says Antonio Gonzalez, president of the Southwest Voter Registration
Education Project and a convenor of the National Latino Congreso, a coalition
of major Hispanic groups.
“We
want comprehensive reform, but right now we need a lifeboat,” he told me.
“We need to take care of the people we can.”
The
National Latino Congreso includes the League of United Latin American Citizens
and the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund.
The
“down payment” strategy also has been endorsed by a huge coalition
of groups organized as Reform Immigration for America, which includes the
National Council of La Raza and the National Immigration Forum.
Senate
Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) may be interested in pushing only the
Development, Relief and Education for Alien Minors Act, but Feinstein wants the
AgJOBS bill, too. Her staff counts no more than 56 votes for either measure
separately but thinks the farm lobby can pull in enough Republicans to get to
60 for the two measures as a package.
The DREAM
Act, co-sponsored by Sens. Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) and Dick Lugar (R-Ind.) would
offer legal status to young people brought to the U.S. illegally as children if
they go to college for two years or join the military.
AgJOBS,
sponsored by Feinstein and Lugar, would offer legal status (a “blue
card”) to workers with two years’ experience in agriculture, and to
their families, if they agreed to stay in farm work for another two years.
Each of
the measures would legalize about 1 million of the 12 million undocumented
people in the U.S.
As policy
matters, both measures make eminent sense. It’s pure madness that the
nation is denied the service of illegal immigrants who want to join the
military.
And
it’s a waste of human talent — and simple cruelty — to
depress the life chances of young people because their parents brought them to
the U.S. illegally.
Meantime,
up to 75 percent of the people working on farms in the U.S. —
particularly picking fruits and vegetables — are here illegally.
It’s hot, back-breaking, low-wage work that American citizens almost
certainly won’t do.
The AgJOBS
bill also would create a channel for foreign farmworkers to enter the U.S.
temporarily. About 200,000 now enter illegally each year — and many stay
because border enforcement has stiffened.
According
to grower organizations, without adequate labor, crops are rotting, farms are
closing down and food imports are increasing, costing jobs in farm-related
industries.
In the
late 1940s and 1950s, when the nation invited temporary farm workers through
the bracero program, illegal immigration plummeted. Then it surged when the
program was canceled in 1960 owing to union opposition.
In 2004,
an AgJOBS bill had 12 Republicans among its 62 co-sponsors, including Sens.
Mitch McConnell (Ky.), Orrin Hatch (Utah), Thad Cochran (Miss.) and John Ensign
(Nev.).
This
year’s bill has only one Republican, Lugar, although there are 11
Republicans in the Senate who have voted for immigration reform in the past.
They include retiring Senators such as Judd Gregg (N.H.), George Voinovich
(Ohio), Bob Bennett (Utah) and Sam Brownback (Kan.), plus John McCain (Ariz.),
Lindsey Graham (S.C.), Susan Collins (Maine), Olympia Snowe (Maine) and Lisa
Murkowski (Alaska).
The
business community — not only agribusiness, but the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, the Business Roundtable and high-tech industries — ought to
lobby Republicans to make a down payment on wider reform that might include
more H-1B visas for high-skilled workers and green cards for science graduates.
Republican
presidential candidates have an interest in getting the divisive immigration
issue “off the table” for 2012 and stopping the party’s
hemorrhage of Hispanic voters. So do party luminaries such as Jeb Bush.
Obama
ought to be in the lead working on legislative strategy — partly to repair
his own reputation with Latinos disappointed at his failure to push
comprehensive reform.
The
“down payment” strategy will hardly fix America’s broken
immigration system, but it’s a step in the right direction.