Posted on 01/17/2009 10:35:47 AM PST by AuntB
Given last year's election results, major immigration reform ought to pass in 2009 but first, the incoming Obama administration has to decide what to do about some draconian policies put into place by the Bush administration.
After failing to pass its own reform bill in 2007, Bush & Co. launched a policy of high-visibility workplace raids, mass deportation and rigorous employment verification designed to show that they were tough on illegal immigration.
President-elect Barack Obama denounced the raids during the campaign, but canceling George W. Bush's policies could open the new administration to charges that it's "soft" on enforcement especially at a time of high unemployment among American workers.
Immediate decisions for Obama and Homeland Security Secretary-designate Janet Napolitano are whether to maintain decrees that all federal contractors use the otherwise-voluntary "e-verify" system to check the immigration status of their workers and push private employers to fire workers subject to "no match" letters from the Social Security system.
Immigration rights advocates, unions and employer groups complain that the databases used for e-verify and no match are faulty and that, between them, up to 5 million illegal workers and some legal ones could be forced out of their jobs.
Already, the recession has caused large-scale dislocations, business closings and housing foreclosures in Hispanic communities, giving some immigrants-rights advocates hope that economic arguments if not only humanitarian ones will convince the Obama administration to cancel Bush's policies.
The best solution as even Bush officials acknowledge is to pass comprehensive immigration reform that would control the U.S. borders; allow in a regular flow of immigrant workers, especially for agricultural jobs; and identify and legalize the status of otherwise law-abiding illegal residents and give them a chance to become citizens.
Bush acknowledged in an interview published Tuesday that, in retrospect, he erred in not pushing for immigration reform after his re-election and in trying for Social Security reform instead.
His Social Security initiative failed and, by the time Congress got around to considering immigration reform, anti-immigrant groups and right-wing radio talk-show hosts had whipped the Republican base and GOP members of Congress into a frenzy of opposition to "amnesty" and insecure borders, killing that initiative, too.
Bush's Homeland Security secretary, Michael Chertoff, said in a speech in December that he and Bush were disappointed at the failure:
"But given that Congress has not passed it, the most important thing we can do is enforce the law the way it has been written, and therefore we've arrested record numbers of illegal aliens . . . and we've deported almost 350,000 in the past year. That is a record."
Chertoff also reported that he had doubled the size of the Border Patrol, built nearly 500 miles of fencing along the Mexican border and increased "worksite enforcement actions" by 27 percent all to reduce illegal immigration and restore lost credibility for the federal government.
Longtime immigration reform advocate Frank Sharry, now director of the immigration-reform campaign America's Voice, said "Chertoff worked admirably" for reform, "but after it failed, what he did was disgraceful."
"He let the enforcement cowboys loose on residential neighborhoods, conducted those employment raids that mainly targeted helpless workers, not the employers, and terrorized the immigrant community," Sharry charged.
The election results have encouraged reform advocates to expect that Obama will push for comprehensive reform this fall. He's declared it a "top priority" of his administration and it was the focus of one of his transition task forces.
Precisely what a reform package should contain, however, is uncertain. Hispanic members of Congress and most pro-immigration groups definitely want it to include a certain path to citizenship for illegal residents who have clean records and pay a fine.
Others, like Rick Swartz, founder of the National Immigration Forum, think that despite Democratic domination of the government and the party's promises "amnesty" for up to 12 million illegal immigrants could still derail reform in Congress.
He advocates an incremental policy of "Ag Jobs-Plus" passage of a widely supported bill, sponsored by Rep. Howard Berman, D-Calif., and Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., to admit agricultural workers seasonally and let them earn green cards over a period of years, plus measures to reduce the years-long backlog of people waiting to join family members in the United States.
Swartz's agenda also would include passing the DREAM Act, allowing a million students brought into the United States illegally as children to become citizens, and giving green cards to 600,000 or so holders of high-skill H-1B visas.
The Obama transition team reportedly has recommended creation of a commission to recommend solutions to any issues not included in legislation the administration backs in the fall.
Even though they were trounced in 2008, anti-immigration forces are still ready to agitate for expulsion not legalization of illegal immigrants. And they have high U.S. unemployment operating in their favor.
So, despite his promises and the vote in November, it will still take courage and political skill for Obama to figure out how to do the right thing, and do it
I don’t believe Mort is a Republican.
Mort has called those who support border control and tough measures against illegal immigration “troglodytes” (his favorite word, apparently) countless times as a member of the “FOX News All-Stars” on Special Report, as RINO Fred Barnes nods in agreement. They’re from the Lindsay Graham School of Emotion on the matter — anyone who wants our immigration laws to be enforced is a “bigot.”
He ain’t. He’s a frickin’ Democrat. I hope a Mexican takes his job.
The illegals first nincompoops will get their way during a time of economic hardships that will have unemployment numbers in the Carter, double digit zone. This is the worst possible time to be subsidizing cheap, illegal labor, but Mort and the rest of the beltway celebrities can’t admit they’ve been wrong on the illegal issue. Even illegals seem to be figuring out that it’s time for them to go home. By the way Mort, did you happen to notice how many Hispanics voted Democrat compared to how many voted Republican and what the turnout was? If Republicans want more of the Hispanic vote, they will have to lure them in with conservative values and principles, not by catering to illegal immigrants. ...Obama and his gang of leftist thugs should figure out that the illegals’s impact on their nationalized healthcare scheme will get in the way of their Marxist happy dreams.
I don’t believe it either!
Mort, Bank of America gave a lot of these border-crossers home loans. In fact, one city’s homes in Ca. are almost all in foreclosure thanks to these tactics. We’re bailing out banks at alarming rates due to the risk that comes with not following our laws.
Senor Mort’s job eees safe. The Mehicans no comprende enough Ingles to write hees column.
So typical of a certain "class" of immigrant to start preaching to America about what it's immigration policies should be.
Like for Mort to go tell that stuff to the Poles and that they ought to let in lots of Russians.
Since America is officially multi-cultural it is okay then to ask what culture Mort represents and why he want to hurt little ol’ Scots-Irish me and my family.
Retiring CIA chief Michael Hayden told reporters on Friday that that Mexico could rank alongside Iran as a challenge for Obama perhaps a greater problem than Iraq.
The U.S. Justice Department said last month that Mexican gangs are the biggest organized crime threat to the United States. National security adviser Stephen Hadley said last week that the worsening violence threatens Mexicos very democracy. (NOT to mention OURS!~)
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hnEcOtMKATcx-2rPitt66wCB9MwQD95PLC400
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