- Americas Special Report
- By Tom Barry
-
-
- (This is the first in a series IRC Americas reports that examine
the political forces shaping the immigration debate in the United States.)
-
- Stereotypes and labels hinder understanding of the intensifying
immigration debate in the United States. The debate divides sharply into
two sides. On one side stand those who believe that immigration flows
should be dramatically restricted. Commonly described as being
anti-immigrant, these groups object to the negative label, saying that
they oppose uncontrolled immigration, not immigrants themselves.
-
- On the other side of the immigration debate are those who believe that
immigration should be regulated but at levels that reflect the reality of
both emigration pressures outside the country and labor needs within it.
In contrast to those arguing for a clamp down on immigration flows, these
forces routinely point to the economic and cultural benefits resulting
from the immigrant community, while also noting that the United States has
always been a nation of immigrants. Described variously by their opponents
as the “pro-immigrant” or “open-borders lobby,” they often assume the
immigrants rights’ standpoint: opposing governmental and private practices
that abuse or exploit illegal as well as legal immigrants.
-
- Those advocating reduced immigration flows can fairly be described as
being immigration restrictionists. Like most other policy reformers, the
immigration restrictionists have three main bases of operation: policy
institutes and think tanks in Washington, D.C.; local citizen movements
and organizations; and a loose team of pundits, politicians, and
polemicists dedicated to influencing public opinion.
-
- Although immigration restrictionists share a common agenda, they do
not operate as a unified political bloc. Anti-immigration forces include
partisans of the two main political parties as well as adherents of
parties and movements on the political left and right that fall outside
mainstream political thinking.
-
- In most cases, the leaders of the national restrictionist groups are
reactionary nationalists who fundamentally believe that immigrants are
undermining the U.S. economy and society, while also posing an increasing
threat to U.S. national security. But many restrictionist groups,
including NumbersUSA and the Center for Immigration Studies, frame their
views in the policy language of environmental protection, access to jobs,
anti-corporate sentiment, and population control. Their rhetoric often
sounds closer to liberal groups than to the citizen militias, white
supremacists, and more nationalist institutes such as Americans for
Immigration Control, which is explicitly dedicated to “preserving our
common heritage as Americans.” The rhetoric obscures the profile of a
growing movement that has as its shared goal a campaign against immigrants
and for draconian border controls and legislation.
-
- Most immigration restrictionists are found within the political right,
but by no means do all Republicans, conservatives, and members of other
right-wing sectors believe that the government should actively restrict
immigration. Some of the strongest proponents of immigration are found
within the ranks of the Republican Party, including the libertarians who
believe that the market, and not the government, should regulate labor
supply and business sectors favoring the easy flow of cheap immigrant
labor.
-
- Within the anti-immigration camp, there are major differences. The
paleoconservatives, for example, together with associated traditionalists
and social conservatives, criticize the leading restrictionist policy
institutes such as the Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR)
and Center for Immigration Studies (CIS). They believe that these groups
espouse essentially secular and liberal ideas about population control,
environmentalism, and labor issues, rather than standing firmly behind the
country’s core Judeo-Christian culture and values.
-
- A belief in the superiority of U.S. culture and values is a common
thread uniting the many restrictionists, although major differences exist
in how this perspective is expressed. The most militant anti-immigrant
activists are often associated with white supremacist groups. Others take
pains to avoid racist rhetoric, insisting the issue is one of “control of
our borders.”
-
- A strong populist streak also runs through the restrictionist
movement. Its critique of the “open borders” agenda of Corporate America
puts it as odds with the leadership of the Republican Party and the
corporate sponsors of both political parties. The pro-worker, anti-big
business arguments of the restrictionists resonate with many Americans who
feel hard-pressed to pay their bills and who worry about their economic
security.
-
- The terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, sparked an increase in
anti-immigration grassroots organizing, congressional bills, and media
coverage—substantially increasing the constituency base of the
restrictionists. Anti-immigrant forces quickly appropriated the
administration’s language of the “war on terrorism”, couching
restrictionist arguments in terms of the importance of gaining total
control of the U.S. borders, downsizing the resident immigrant population,
and severely restricting new immigration.
-
- The rising influence of these diverse forces rests in the widespread
public conviction that U.S. immigration policy and U.S. borders are out of
control. This concern with the cultural, economic, environmental, and
security impact of the influx of immigrants does not necessarily arise
from racist, xenophobic, or supremacist beliefs. It is often the result of
people’s own experience with the effects of a large and expanding
immigrant population in their communities, combined with the lenses for
interpretation of this phenomena offered by governments and mass media.
-
- Restrictionist Policy Institutes
-
- The leading national restrictionist organizations in the immigration
debate, like those in the language debate, such as ProEnglish [sic] and
English First, are part of an institutional network that emerged from the
population control, environmental, and carrying-capacity movements in the
late 1970s. By the mid-1970s, the alarmist predictions that zero
population growth advocates had been making during the post-WWII boom
could no longer be supported by the population statistics. Birth
statistics were showing steady declines. But population statistics began
to show—as they still do—that the main source of population growth in the
United States is the expanding first- and second-generation immigrant
population. So, for a faction within Zero Population Growth, “population
control” in the United States became synonymous with “immigration
control.” John Tanton along with several other former board members of ZPG
in 1979 formed the country’s first anti-immigrant policy institute, the
Federation for American Immigration Reform (FAIR) .
-
- Rick Swartz, who founded the self-identified “pro-immigrant” National
Immigration Forum in 1982, described Tanton as the “puppeteer behind this
entire [restrictionist] movement.” In addition to being a cofounder and
current board member of FAIR, Tanton has been a key figure in establishing
and funding a phalanx of anti-immigrant and “English Only” institutes,
including NumbersUSA, Center for Immigration Studies,
Population-Environment Balance, U.S. English, ProEnglish, Social Contract
Press, and U.S. Inc.
-
- Other leading restrictionist groups include Project USA, Americans for
Immigration Control, and Americans for a Better Immigration (ABI). The
most influential institutes are FAIR, which focuses on providing
logistical support for the restrictionist movement, and CIS, which
concentrates on producing briefing papers for Congress and the media.
Associated groups that provide legal assistance to anti-immigrant
campaigns and organizations are the Immigration Reform Law Institute and
Friends of Immigration Law Enforcement. Also part of the D.C.-based
infrastructure of restrictionist organizations are anti-immigration
political action committees—the most prominent being Team America headed
by Rep. Tom Tancredo, R-CO, and the U.S. Immigration Reform Political
Action Committee (USIRP), whose president is Mary Lou Tanton, wife of John
Tanton. These groups often share interlocking directorates and sources of
rightwing financing.
-
- These and other leading restrictionist groups have reworked their
image since the early days of the movement to restrict immigration and
establish English as the official language in the states. They explicitly
maintain that they are not “anti-immigrant,” and instead identify
themselves as opposing “mass immigration”—which has become the catch
phrase of the restrictionist movement.
-
- These institutes are politically situated on the right and within the
umbrella of the Republican Party. But they operate outside the political
network of the right’s leading think tanks and policy institutes, such as
the American Enterprise Institute and the Heritage
Foundation—organizations that are closely associated with the interests of
Corporate America and therefore oppose the restrictionist agenda. The
restrictionist institutes are linked with these and other right-wing
organizations through the main right-wing foundations that fund both
groups.
-
- White Supremacists
- Among the most prominent white supremacist organizations are the
Council of Conservative Citizens (the successor to the White Citizen
Councils), the European-American Unity and Rights Organization-EURO
(former Ku Klux Klan chief David Duke directs EURO), the pro-eugenics
Pioneer Fund, the American Nationalist Union, and the Occidental
Quarterly (a journal dedicated to the notion that “immigration into
the United States should be restricted to selected people of European
ancestry”).
-
- Although not in the forefront of the current surge in anti-immigrant
sentiment and organizing, white supremacist organizations and their
leaders have ties to state-level anti-immigrant campaigns such as Protect
Arizona Now (PAN) and to national anti-immigrant advocacy organizations
such as the Federation for American Immigration Reform. Virginia
Abernathy, who served as the chair of PAN’s national advisory, is an
editorial board member of Occidental Quarterly and speaks at
forums sponsored by the Council of Conservative Citizens, for example.
According to Duke’s EURO, “Massive Third World immigration will destroy
the character and heritage of America and put the European American
population at risk. The time has come to demand enforcement of our laws
concerning illegal immigration and to severely limit legal immigration.”
-
- Hold-the-Line Environmentalists
-
- The leading anti-immigrant policy institutes, including NumbersUSA and
Center for Immigration Studies, wield arguments about the impact of
immigrants on urban sprawl and resource depletion. The environmental wing
of the anti-immigrant forces emerged from the zero-population movement of
the 1960s and 1970s. Included in this wing of the immigration
restrictionists are such organizations as Environment-Population Balance,
Carrying Capacity Network, and Negative Population Growth. These
organizations base their restrictionism on the fact that immigration is
the most significant factor in U.S. population growth.
-
- Carrying Capacity Network distributes a bumper-sticker bearing the
slogan: “Mass Immigration = Lifeboat USA Sinking.” Negative Population
Growth regards even the granting of political asylum as a threat to U.S.
sustainable development, and in the mid-1990s it called the government’s
purportedly liberal refugee policy the “Achilles Heel of Immigration
Reform.”
-
- The public voice of the anti-immigration environmentalists is Richard
Lamm, the former Colorado governor who is the coauthor of The
Immigration Time Bomb: The Fragmenting of America. Lamm, who serves
on FAIR’s advisory board, led the restrictionist slate of candidates who
in 2004 sought unsuccessfully to win control of Sierra Club’s elected
board of directors.
-
- Paleoconservatives
-
- These traditional conservatives have consistently opposed “liberal’
immigration laws on both nationalistic and cultural supremacy grounds.
They argue that Corporate America has lost its loyalty to the United
States. In their view, transnational corporations together with liberal
pro-immigrant groups have imposed in practice an open-borders agenda that
not only facilitates trade and investments flows but also immigration
flows. In addition, they argue that high immigration flows are diluting
our national identity and turning the United States into a polyglot nation
that is losing its Anglo-American core values.
-
- Paleoconservatives do not generally join with the ranks of language
and immigration restrictionist organizations. These traditionalists charge
that the leading restrictionist organizations are driven more by liberals
and progressive values than conservative ones. For example, they complain
that population-control measures run counter to orthodox religious values.
Although paleoconservatives are social conservatives, they are not closely
tied to the Religious Right and see themselves more as intellectuals than
as a grassroots force. A leading voice of paleoconservative thought
regarding immigration was Samuel Francis, whose book America
Extinguished: Mass Immigration and the Disintegration of American Culture,
published shortly before he died, set forth the paleoconservative
position. “Security, economy, and party interests are well and good, but
the fundamental issue in the immigration debate is who we are and what
sort of nation we want to be.”
-
- Paleocons such as Samuel Francis and Patrick Buchanan quickly lined up
behind Samuel Huntington’s cultural war and “clash of civilization”
theses. “You cannot expect millions of aliens from one civilization to
enter the country, abandon all loyalties and values of their old
civilization and sign up with all of those of the new one they have
entered,” warned Francis. More intellectuals and polemicists than
activists, the paleoconservatives have seen their influence expand as the
anti-immigrant forces multiply. The popularity of the American
Conservative, the flagship publication of the paleocons, demonstrates
that these traditional conservatives are experiencing a comeback—a result
not only of their anti-immigrant arguments but also of their opposition to
the Iraq occupation and their criticism of the neoconservatives and the
Bush administration’s “big government” policies.
-
- Neoconservatives
-
- This influential small group of ideologues, foreign policy
strategists, and political operatives does not advocate immigration
restrictionism. Most of the leading neoconservatives, especially the Jews
and Catholics, have a strong sense of their immigrant origins. Moreover,
the neoconservatives, as a consequence of their forging ever-closer
alliance with Wall Street capitalists, have regarded immigration flows of
both cheap and skilled workers as a benefit for U.S. corporations and
hence the U.S. economy.
-
- However, neoconservatives, as part of their campaign against
multiculturalism and government policies that attempt to reshape the
“natural order” and promote equity, are fierce opponents of affirmative
action programs and government-sponsored bilingual education. They are
also proponents of what they call “Official English” but what are more
commonly known as “English Only” laws. The Sept. 11 attacks and the war on
terrorism have caused many neocons to back away from their pro-immigration
posture.
-
- The global backlash against the Bush administration’s war on terrorism
and its Middle East policies is partly evident in increased anti-Semitism
and anti-Americanism. This has raised neocon apprehension about the
expanding Muslim population in the United Staes and Europe. In their book
An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror, leading neocons
David Frum and Richard Perle called for a national identification system
as a way to break the alleged immigration-terrorism link. Another
indicator of the neoconservative conversion to restrictionism is the
anti-immigrant writings of the Manhattan Institute’s Heather MacDonald,
who concluded a recent op-ed with this recommendation: “ Washington should
allocate the resources to detain and deport illegals and should start
enforcing long-standing laws against employing alien lawbreakers. A
deafening roar of ‘racism’ will result—but with the country at war,
pandering to the race advocates must give way to protecting American
lives.”
-
- A development worth noting is that the emerging anti-immigrant
position among neoconservatives is increasingly akin to that of the
cultural and “value” arguments of the paleoconservatives, who have been
the leading critics of the neoconservatives since the neocon-paleocon
split in the right-wing in the early 1980s.
-
- Border Vigilantes
-
- Over the past few decades numerous incidents have occurred in
southeastern Arizona in which white ranchers resort to violence—including
torture—against immigrants crossing from Mexico. In the past few years,
anti-immigrant vigilante activity has become institutionalized in the form
of citizen militias that have emerged in Arizona and to a lesser extent in
California and Texas.
-
- The leading voice among the border vigilantes is Glenn Spencer, who
founded the American Border Patrol. Before moving to Arizona from
California, the outspoken Spencer, who is associated with such white
supremacist groups as the Council of Conservative Citizens and the
National Alliance, was a leading advocate of the anti-immigrant
Proposition 187 and proposals to make English the official language of
California. Recently, the national media have portrayed him as a
grassroots patriot protecting America and Arizona from an “invasion of
illegals.”
-
- Other vigilante groups include Ranch Rescue, Arizona Ranchers’
Alliance, and Civil Homeland Defense. Ranch Rescue has organized volunteer
hunts for “hordes of criminal aliens,” encouraging volunteers to “come and
have fun in the sun” and to bring their weapons and night-vision
equipment.
-
- The latest citizen group to take border patrolling into its own hands
is the Minuteman Project, which is organizing hundreds of volunteers from
around the nation to patrol the border and help apprehend immigrants.
“This is a direct challenge to President Bush,” said project organizer
Chris Simox who lives in Tombstone, AZ. “You have continued to ignore this
problem. So this is a last-ditch effort to roll up our sleeves and do it
ourselves.”
-
- State Anti-Immigration Movements
-
- Framing immigration as an issue of “Them versus Us” in the 1980s,
garnered Republican Party stalwarts and New Right constituencies in
California landslide support for the anti-immigrant Proposition 187 in
1994. A spate of complaints by native Latinos who said that police were
stopping them to ask for proof of citizenship sparked the creation of a
state-wide coalition to oppose the discriminatory treatment resulting from
the proposition.
-
- In 1998 a court decision that ruled the measure unconstitutional
proved a severe setback for the restrictionist movement. Unable to push
anti-immigrant bills forward in Congress, the country’s chief
restrictionist strategists and policy institutes, notably John Tanton and
FAIR, switched tactics; they began to support local and state-level
anti-immigrant campaigns as part of a bottom-up strategy to stop
immigration flows.
-
- In November 2004, Arizona voters approved the anti-immigrant
Proposition 200 referendum that requires voters to present proof of
citizenship, denies non-federally mandated services to unauthorized
immigrants, and requires local and state employees to alert immigration
authorities if they determine a client is an “illegal alien.” Exploiting
post-Sept. 11 fears about attacks by foreigners on the U.S. homeland, the
proposition organizers called their campaign Protect Arizona Now. AN’s
logo has a mounted figure galloping across the state map waving the U.S.
flag.
-
- Although PAN did not openly appeal to racist beliefs, its national
advisory board included prominent white supremacists and cultural
nationalists. And it was funded by a network of national anti-immigrants
-- including FAIR, Population-Environment Balance, Americans for
Immigration Control, and Americans for Better Immigration.
-
- Following the victory of the PAN anti-immigrant initiative, PAN
director Kathy McKee advised other citizen groups around the country to
“get busy now” because “things are really, really tough with tens of
thousands of illegals invading our country every single day.” After the
proposition beat back a legal challenge to its constitutionality, the PAN
victory has sparked enthusiasm among other state-wide groups determined
“to take our country back.”
-
- At least 30 groups, most of them receiving logistical assistance and
in some cases funding from FAIR and other national anti-immigration
organizations, are preparing to sponsor new state referendums and
legislation that they hope will send a clear message to immigrants that
they aren’t wanted. Included among them are Georgians for Immigration
Reform and Defend Colorado Now. After spearheading a successful campaign
to pressure Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to veto a bill to permit
undocumented residents to obtain driver’s licenses, the right-wing
California Republican Assembly has launched another campaign that would in
effect resurrect the provisions of Proposition 187.
-
- Proposition 187 set the precedent of a state initiative targeting
immigrants. It mandated that government workers, including teachers, check
immigration status and deny services to those in the United States
illegally. Championed by Save Our State, the anti-immigrant measure was
sold as a solution that would solve California’s financial crisis. While
benefiting from some national funding, support for Proposition 187 was
widespread among the state’s non-Latino voters.
-
- The recent increase in restrictionist legislation, anti-immigrant
activism and media excitement about the dangers of immigration shows that
a broad-based offensive has taken root in the United States. The groups
coordinating this offensive, despite their rhetorical and ideological
differences, are well-funded, well-connected and increasingly powerful.
-
- Fears about immigrant terrorists after Sept. 11, combined with rising
concerns about economic security after the end of the 1990s’ boom, have
diminished the near-term prospects for an immigration reform agenda that
favors immigrants, whether in the country legally or illegally.
Immigration restrictionism has moved to the center of the public debate,
once occupied by advocacy for broad legalization, amnesty, and family
reunification.
-
- Tom Barry is policy director of the International Relations
Center, online at
www.irc-online.org and an associate of the IRC Americas Program.
-
- Endnotes
1 The Puppeteer,” Intelligence Report, Southern Poverty Law
Center, Summer 2002
http://www.splcenter.org/intel/intelreport/article.jsp?aid=93
- 2 “John Tanton,” Right Web Profile (International Relations Center,
2004), at:
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/ind/tanton/tanton.php
- 3 The major sources of funding for the restrictionist institutes
include the following foundations: Philip M, McKenna Foundation, Jaquelin
Hume Foundation, Sarah Scaife Foundation, John M. Olin Foundation,
Carthage Foundation, and the Scaife Family Foundation.
- 4 See various articles and reports published by The Center for New
Community, including “White Nationalist Staffing U.S. Immigration Reform
PAC” (nd), at:
http://bdi.newcomm.org/content/view/5/2/; and Protect Arizona Now
Selects White Supremacist to Chair National Advisory Board, August
2004, at:
http://www.newcomm.org/pan.pdf
- 5 “Our Principles,” European-American Unity and Rights Organization,
http://www.whitecivilrights.com/
- 6 Samuel Francis, “Weak Reasons for Immigration Control,”
Chronicles, January 17, 2004.
- 7 Heather MacDonald, “Get Serious About Immigration Enforcement,”
Dallas Morning News, December 30, 2004.
- 8 Zoe Hammer-Tomizuka and Jennifer Allen, Hate or Heroism: Vigilantes
on the Arizona-Mexico Border ( Tucson: Border Action Network, December
2002), at: http://www.borderaction.org/PDFs/BAN-Vigilante%20Report.pdf
- 9 David Kelly, “Taking Border Patrol Into Their Own Hands,” Los
Angeles Times, February 2, 2005.
- 10 Fred Krissman, “Them or Us?: Assessing Responsibility for
Undocumented Migration from Mexico,” Center for US-Mexican Studies, 2004.
- 11 Margot Veranes and Adriana Navarro, “Racist Fervor becomes Law in
Arizona : Calls for State Boycott Gain Momentum,” IRC Americas Program,
June 2005, http://americas.irc-online.org/articles/2005/0506prop200.html
- 12 “Funding Information,” Protect Arizona Now, at
www.pan2004.com/funding.htm
- 13 According to Protect Arizona Now, other restrictionist initiatives
are active in Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, DC, Florida, Idaho,
Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana,
Nebraska, Nevada, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, South Dakota,
Utah, Washington, and Wyoming.
- 14 Yvonne Wingett, “Prop. 200 Win Inspires Other Groups Across U.S.,”
ArizonaRepublic, Nov. 7, 2004; “State Initiatives,” Protect
Arizona Now, at:
ww.pan2004/whatshot_stateinitiatives.html
-
- For More Information
- Glossary of Right-Wing Sectors in U.S. Foreign Policy
-
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/charts/glossary.php
- The Immigration Debate: Whose Side Are You On?
-
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/analysis/2005/0506immig.php
- Right Web Profiles of Restrictionist Groups
-
http://rightweb.irc-online.org/org/index.php
- Center for Immigration Studies
-
http://www.cis.org
- ProEnglish
-
http://www.proenglish.org
- Congressional Immigration Reform Caucus
-
http://www.tancredo.house.gov/welcome.htm
- Migration and Immigration Issues Index, IRC Americas Program
-
http://americas.irc-online.org/index/immig/index.php
- Published by
the Americas Program at the International Relations Center (IRC,
formerly Interhemispheric Resource Center, online at
www.irc-online.org). ©2005.
- Recommended
citation:
Tom Barry “Immigration Debate: Politics, Ideologies of
Anti-Immigration Forces,” special report, Americas Program (Silver
City, NM: Interhemispheric Resource Center, June 17, 2005).
- Web
location:
http://www.americaspolicy.org/reports/2005/0506ideologies.html
- Production
Information:
Author: Tom Barry
Editors: Laura Carlsen
Layout: Tonya Cannariato, IRC
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