The “gang of eight” U.S. Senators, four Democrats and four
Republicans, have released a set of principles that they see as the basis for
comprehensive immigration reform legislation.
The fact that they are trying to resolve this issue is a positive step,
and has the potential to allow millions of people to finally live normal lives,
free of fear and exploitation. But a key
component of their plan calls into question whether that promise will ever be
realized.
Immigrants’ advocates have long held that a “pathway to
citizenship” must be part of any immigration reform plan, allowing those
currently in the United States without papers to earn U.S. citizenship.
Conservative icon Ronald Reagan agreed with this, saying, "I believe
in the idea of amnesty for those who have put down roots and lived here, even
though sometime back they may have entered illegally." Today
anti-immigrant groups spit out the term “amnesty” as a curse, and many in the
current crop of Republican politicians (Texas’ U.S. Senators prominent among
them) use it to slander the very idea of allowing the undocumented to become
citizens.
Though Cornyn and Cruz present the rejection of earned
citizenship as a principled ideological stance, many conservative pundits have
pointed out that Hispanics tend to vote for Democrats – 71%
voted for Barack Obama – so allowing the 11 million or so mostly, but not
entirely, Hispanic undocumented immigrants currently in the U.S. to vote might hurt
Republicans in future elections.
Alienating Hispanic voters is costing Republicans elections
now, but adding more Hispanic voters could hurt Republicans in the future. What are they to do?
The recently unveiled framework makes border security a
prerequisite for the issuance of green cards to undocumented immigrants. After that they could apply for full
citizenship, going to the “back of the line.”
Of course the length of that line depends on what country
they come from since each nation is assigned a quota; whether they are related
by blood or marriage to U.S. citizens; and their income and skills. For a Mexican national with no family in the
United States, no money or special skills, the line that they will be going to
the back of is over a century long.
But until the border is declared secure, that
hundred-plus-year clock will not start ticking.
The principles released by the “gang of eight” do not define
a secure border, so it is impossible to know how many years, how many new
Border Patrol agents, how many more drones, how many miles of new border wall,
it might take to get there.
The Senate plan calls for a commission made up of “governors, attorneys general, and community leaders living along the Southwest border“ to determine when the border has been secured.
Immigrants’ advocates cried foul at the notion that Texas governor Rick Perry and Arizona’s Jan Brewer could hold the citizenship of millions hostage indefinitely by refusing to declare the border secure.
Perry manages to find money for
Highway Patrol speedboats with machine guns mounted on the front to patrol the
Rio Grande at the same time as he cuts $4.5 billion from Texas’ schools. Brewer has committed Arizona’s scarce financial
resources to defending SB 1070, the state law intended to make immigrants’
lives so hellish that they “self-deport.”
Neither are particularly objective in their assessment of
the border.
The gang seems to have viewed sacrificing the border to get
a bill as a given, and they sold us out so quickly that it never occurred to them
that making border security a prerequisite could put citizenship in permanent
limbo.
Democratic gang members have responded to the criticism with assurances that the Department of Homeland Security would develop a new, workable definition of a secure border tied to concrete metrics rather than the delusions of Perry and Brewer. They now say the commission will be strictly advisory.
Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano is certainly
further form the lunatic fringe than the governors of Texas and Arizona, but
the Department of Homeland Security has a terrible record on the border.
Upon taking office Napolitano refused to halt the
condemnation of land and construction of border walls in South Texas and
elsewhere. Early last year her
underlings finally succeeded in pressuring the US section of the International
Boundary and Water Commission to approve walls in the floodplain at Roma, Rio
Grande City, and Los Ebanos, despite the risk to residents on both sides of the
river and the damage that the Lower Rio Grande Valley National Wildlife Refuge
and Roma Bluffs World Birding Center will suffer.
Last week Secretary Napolitano spoke in El Paso, ranked the
safest big city in the United States for the third year running, and declared
that the border is more secure than ever, and that the idea that immigration
reform should be held hostage to border security “suffers
from a fundamental flaw.”
Her argument is backed by the numbers. Border Patrol apprehensions are at a forty
year low, and the Pew
Research Center has found that net migration from Mexico is effectively at
zero, with as many people heading south as north.
So why has her agency continued to push for border
walls? Politics, of course.
At the beginning of her tenure halting border wall
construction would have opened up the newly elected President Obama to attacks
in the press. The “gang of eight”
likewise assume that throwing the border under the bus is a political necessity
to get a bill through Congress, so they do it without hesitation.
Immigration reform should not be held hostage to “border
security”, whether it is Perry and Brewer or Napolitano who decide on what that
means. There will always be conflicting
political needs that will prevent the honest assessment and agreement that
would allow reform to move forward.
When the Senators draft their bill in the coming weeks
border security must not be a prerequisite for anything else. Otherwise real reform will always be just
over the horizon, one more agent, one more drone, one more wall away.
Politics is an abstraction, but the actual border consists
of real lives and real landscapes. We
are not a bargaining chip for politicians who have never dipped a toe in the
Rio Grande, walked a trail in the LRGV National Wildlife Refuge, or looked a
South Texas citrus grower in the eye.
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