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Why “Guest Workers” Won’t Work
by W. James Antle III
12 December 2005
Most of the problems commonly associated with out-of-control immigration
stem not from the immigrants’ illegality but their sheer numbers.
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The Financial Times
headline says it well: “Bush tries balancing act on illegal immigration.”
The president has been traveling the country, pledging strengthened border
security and improved interior enforcement -- alongside the adoption of a
guest-workers program that would effectively amnesty millions of illegal
aliens.
For conservatives, the Bush balancing act offers border patrol agents more
resources, manpower and detention space and voters the promise of a more
aggressive enforcement posture. For business interests seeking to increase
the number of jobs Americans can’t afford to do, it would at least temporarily
legalize illegals already here and create thousands of additional guest-worker
permits.
Supporters of this approach claim that since enforcement alone won’t work,
this is the only realistic immigration reform solution. But the grand
guest-workers compromise comes with its own problems.
The first is political. While the two principal reform proposals competing
in the Senate differ mainly over whether illegal aliens should be eligible
to participate in a guest-workers program or whether they should be made
to apply from their home countries, the House is not keen on creating any
temporary work permits without first securing the border. House Judiciary
Committee Chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-WI), who has jurisdiction over
immigration issues, has proposed security legislation without guest workers.
The second is past precedent. This bait and switch
is not new. In 1986, Congress passed and President Reagan signed an
amnesty for 2.7 million illegal aliens coupled with tough new penalties on
employers of undocumented workers. Today, employer sanctions are underutilized
and illegal immigration unabated.
Four years later, legal immigration levels were increased while renewed attention
to the border was promised. Instead, the crisis intensified throughout
the 1990s. In 1996, a Republican-controlled Congress passed and Bill
Clinton signed a bill that contained punitive measures against illegals but
didn’t include comprehensive action -- and dropped the reduction in legal
immigration proposed by the Clinton immigration-reform commission chaired
by Barbara Jordan.
None of these past bills curtailed illegal immigration. In most cases,
the liberalization occurred but the promised security enhancements failed
to materialize. It is not surprising that some Americans would be skeptical
about repeating this formula now.
The third problem is practical. All the major guest-workers programs
now on the table expect overwhelmed immigration bureaucracies to sort through
applications from the approximately 12 million illegals currently working
in the United States to determine whether they are otherwise law-abiding
and meet all the other eligibility requirements. As the backlog grows,
the political pressure will become enormous and the potential for fraud will
increase.
A similar problem exists when it is time for the temporary workers to go
home. Perhaps 40 percent of the current illegal population entered
the United States legally and overstayed their visas. If the laws on
the books now are unenforceable, as guest-workers proponents claim, how will
their proposal work any better? And how many guest workers will have
children and stay in the country indefinitely thanks to birthright citizenship?
Temporary workers, indeed.
But the biggest problem with the compromise President Bush is offering is
that it isn’t a compromise is any meaningful sense. It doesn’t address
the real reasons a majority of Americans, from all racial and ethnic backgrounds,
are concerned about our dilapidated immigration system.
Numbers matter.
Most of the problems commonly associated with out-of-control immigration
stem not from the immigrants’ illegality -- though that is a problem in its
own right -- but their sheer numbers. If the number of people from
other countries who lacked English skills and needed public assistance were
small, the situation would be manageable.
But when the numbers grow beyond manageable levels, the problems become harder
to deal with. We are talking about a population that is disproportionately
poor, non-English-speaking, without health insurance and therefore in need
of assistance. Their employers are not offering this assistance, but
in many cases taxpayers and struggling communities are. Legalizing
the illegal members of this population will not make those needs -- or the
overcrowded schools and public hospitals, the linguistic and cultural balkanization
or even the native-born economic anxieties -- go away. Instead it may
well make all those problems worse.
A sense of country matters, too. It is admirable to want to feed your
family, improve your living standards and seek economic opportunities.
But these universal human aspirations do not by themselves translate into
patriotic assimilation.
A euphemistic amnesty that sees newcomers to our shores as “willing workers”
rather than aspiring Americans is hardly better than an explicit amnesty.
And what about the United States as a country, a particular place with a
history, heroes, language and way of life? Doesn’t that matter when
formulating immigration policy?
To some would-be immigration reformers, it seems that the answer is no --
if they have even thought about the question at all. But in an unarticulated
way, millions of ordinary Americans have. That’s why Bush’s guest-workers
“balancing act” probably doesn’t have a leg to stand on.W. James Antle III is a primary columnist for Intellectual Conservative.com. He works as an assistant editor of The American Conservative magazine and is also a senior editor of EnterStageRight.com. The views expressed here represent his alone.
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