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Guest Column |
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The Immigration Debate Rolls On: |
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As hundreds of thousands of mainly Mexican migrants mount impressive displays of strength and self-esteem as they publicly protest harsh immigration reform proposals across the country, one must not lose sight of a long series of decisions and counterproductive public stands which have helped contribute to the magnitude of the immigration problem. Indeed, it is no stretch to claim that the immigration crisis that now dominates the congressional and national debate is the direct result of decades of pretences, deception, and benighted policies that have motivated several million Central and South Americans to make the somber decision to leave their homelands for the U.S., together with millions of more Mexicans who constitute the largest bloc of undocumented migrants now in the country. Together with the other dysfunctional Bush administration policies which have been adopted relative to Latin America – whether in the realm of foreign policy or trade agreements – Washington has once again failed in spectacular fashion when it comes to a sound immigration policy. Creating a Crisis In Mexico, trade policy had a similar devastating impact on rural areas, with the NAFTA trade pact leaving small farmers unprotected in the face of tariff-free imports from massively subsidized U.S. agro industries. So damaging was the agreement to small- scale Mexican farmers – whose ancestors have grown maize for millennia – that they found themselves being undercut by corn from Iowa. This forced them to sell off their land at a fraction of its earlier worth, and destined many of them to head north to the U.S. As the pressures pushing Latin Americans to immigrate illegally were growing, politicians in the U.S., symbolized by the Clinton and George W. Bush administrations, were perpetuating a policy of denial, which failed to confront the hard realities of the border issue. While Bush and Mexico’s President Vicente Fox were engaging in mutual photo ops, the immigration situation rapidly worsened as more drugs and contraband were transited at the border and the border patrol became increasingly helpless. Patrols were overwhelmed by the attempted entry of over a million would be refugees annually. Instead of meaningful enforcement, immigration policy essentially consisted of the designation of a 10 mile zone back from the border where the rules were at least intermittently upheld. But once an immigrant made it past that surveillance, enforcement simply didn’t occur. What this often meant was that by simple individual initiative together with prearranged transportation by U.S. factories and agro-business, immigrants would be taken to their factory jobs (e.g., Tyson Chicken Company in Arkansas). Rather than interdiction being upheld, the dirty little secret was that porosity knowingly and purposely reigned along the border. Greed Rules the Day Towards a Sensible Reform The reality of the border suggests that immigration reform constitutes a profound issue that requires the bipartisan backing of U.S. policymakers, who now must be prepared to examine both the labor practices of U.S. corporations, and failed past U.S. foreign policy initiatives which went a long way in driving illegal immigration. One positive step would be to reevaluate free trade agreements such as NAFTA and CAFTA-DR to ensure that productive rural and industrial employment exists in Latin America, and is not smothered by an unfair single factor rationale that attempts to justify existing policy. In Washington’s dealings with Mexico City, the ugly truth is that much of Mexico is being devastated by untrammeled trade. Another constructive measure would be to sensibly enforce immigration policies within this country, a practice which would remove the incentives to hire undocumented workers. This analysis was prepared by COHA Director Larry Birns and Research Fellow Michael Lettieri April 12, 2006 The Council on Hemispheric Affairs, founded in 1975,
is an independent, non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt research and
information organization. It has been described on the Senate floor as being
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coha@coha.org. (In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed by HispanicVista.com (www.hispanicvista.com) without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.) |