It’s time for real immigration reform

By Justin Akers Chacon, December 21, 2009

Congress should move quickly from health care to immigration reform. But to succeed, it will have to beat back specious anti-immigrant claims.

On Dec.15, Rep. Luis Gutierrez, D-Ill., introduced the Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America’s Security and Prosperity Act. The bill is the first effort to pass federal immigration reform under the Obama Administration and a Democratic-controlled Congress after several failed attempts during the Bush era.

The Gutierrez proposal and a forthcoming Senate counterpart reflect the Democrats’ efforts to fulfill a campaign promise that turned out large numbers to the polls in their favor. It also reflects the growing clout of Latino and immigrant voters, a rising force in U.S. politics.

There is broad public support for immigration reform that would provide a path to citizenship. A May Pew Research Center study revealed that 63 percent of the population supports a legalization program, with 73 percent of Democrats and 50 percent of Republicans in favor.

With a Democratic majority, broad public support for reform, and a current immigration policy that is outdated and dysfunctional, the time is ripe to pass a real reform.

Despite the alignment of favorable forces, the persistence of anti-immigrant ideology continues to poison the well of American politics, alleging that undocumented workers take jobs from U.S. citizens.

But this is not the case.

“Locales with high unemployment rates do not necessarily have large numbers of recent immigrants, and locales with many recent immigrants do not necessarily have high unemployment rates,” notes the Immigration Policy Center. This shows that unemployment is more structural than the result of a direct competition for the same jobs. So, immigrants have supplemented a graying American work force rather than supplanted it.

Access to legal status and citizenship for the undocumented workforce would be good for the whole economy. The Cato Institute estimates that giving undocumented immigrants a path to citizenship would add $180 billion to the GDP.

Conversely, the emphasis on increased enforcement has proven costly, ineffective and disruptive to the lives of millions of people who have committed no crime except working without papers. It would cost an estimated $200 billion to remove the undocumented population, according to the Department of Homeland Security. Instead of spending that money in this coercive way, the United States could put those badly needed resources where they can be used to create jobs.

In the coming months, the majority that favors a real immigration reform policy — one that unites and integrates undocumented immigrant families with full rights, opportunities and equal protection before the law — will need to raise its voice.

Those on the other side will be raising theirs.

Justin Akers Chacon is a professor of U.S. History and Chicano Studies in San Diego. He can be reached at pmproj [at] progressive [dot] org.

Comments

You are confusing several issues. First of all there is a big difference between immigration and illegal aliens. Americans don't have a problem with immigrants but what is making them very angry is the push for amnesty for law breakers.

The more you push for amnesty the more anger *you* are creating. Its the social injustice of granting amnesty to millions of law breakers that angers the American people. You are trying to turn this around by saying people are xenophobic.

Secondly, you are confusing GDP with the real economy. The fact is that productivity, which GDP measures, has little to do with wages anymore. For a number of reasons the American people are largely detached from the wealth we generate but we are tied to the debt. GDP makes Wall Street happy but main street just signs.

The problem is that you are putting forward the same old corporatist arguments. The policies that come from this line of thinking make America less secure, more indebted, and angry.

We need to secure the borders. A secure border is the most basic job of national security. Second we need to end corporate welfare and get back to placing value in work, not just owning. If we can do these simple things, and I doubt we can, we will again see Americans happy to welcome immigrants.

But if you keep ignoring the American worker and ignoring our national security then you will help fuel the growth of the radical right.

Submitted by masher on Sun, 01/03/2010 - 7:48pm.
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