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- Sensenbrenner Portfolio -- Does
Congressman Profit From Undocumented Labor?
- By Roberto Lovato
- New America Media,
When President Bush signed into law on
Oct. 4 a bill authorizing the construction of a 700-mile wall along the
U.S.-Mexico border, the man who stood to reap the greatest political
profits did not join the president in Arizona. Instead, Congressman
James Sensenbrenner is back in his Milwaukee district fending off a
growing chorus of local critics who claim he is also reaping financial
profits from the very immigration policies he has championed.
Immigration rights advocates, the congressman's Democratic opponent and
some constituents are pointing to Sensenbrenner's investments in
companies they say are generating profits from the labor of undocumented
immigrants. They also say the congressman stands to benefit from
investments in companies contracted by the federal government to provide
services he has proposed as part of his immigration reform legislation
-- such as building massive immigrant detention centers or providing
surveillance systems to monitor immigrants near the border.
An analysis of companies identified in Sensenbrenner's most recent
financial disclosure forms (2005) reveals that the congressman has
invested in companies that have directly hired or subcontracted with
employers who hire undocumented workers.
Drawing especially strong criticism are the $86,500 in stocks
Sensenbrenner holds in the construction and infrastructure colossus
Halliburton. The Texas-based giant has been the subject of Senate
hearings into its labor practices in the Gulf Coast following Hurricane
Katrina. News reports and several panelists at Senate hearings have
stated that Halliburton used subcontractors hiring hundreds, perhaps
thousands of undocumented workers as part of
no-bid federal contracts to cleanup Belle Chasse Naval base and other
military facilities in the devastated region. Halliburton has also
secured a
$385 million Department of Homeland Security contract to build
gigantic immigrant detention centers near the U.S.-Mexico border and
stands to secure further contracts from proposals to reopen closed
military bases to house deportees and detainees.
Halliburton has also been mentioned as one of the main contractors to
build increased security infrastructure, security roads and improved
employment verification systems at ports of entry.
Sensenbrenner owns more than $563,536 in General Electric stocks. GE's
Security Unit has been a Pentagon subcontractor, providing video
surveillance and other electronic security systems at the border. and
contributed to Sensenbrenner through its employee PAC. Boeing, which
recently secured a $2.5 billion contract order to install sensors, radar
and cameras along the U.S. borders, is among the top contributors to
Sensenbrenner's PAC.
Sensenbrenner's filings showed a total net worth in excess of $10
million in 2005, with just under $1 million in stock investments in
Kimberly-Clark, maker of tissues and personal care products.
The multibillion dollar federal contracts and proposals to build the
physical and virtual walls at the border -- which were signed into law
on Oct. 4 -- were first proposed in Sensenbrenner's now historic
immigration bill, HR 4437.
As November elections draw near, Sensenbrenner, like other elected
officials, is spending more time in his district. But the immigration
issue may not be giving him the political traction it once did. Usually
predictable Town Hall meetings with constituents are increasingly
becoming more heated. A June 25, 2006, town hall held in Thiensville,
Wis., is revealing. Sensenbrenner was confronted by constituent Lester
Schultz, who asked the congressman about the "moral and ethical"
implications of investing in companies like Halliburton, which hire
undocumented workers.
Sensenbrenner said the investments in question were "bequeathed to me
before I began my public service." When pressed he insisted that his
portfolio didn't affect his votes. "We don't believe it," some audience
members responded.
Asked about Schultz' and others' criticisms of the congressman's
investments in companies hiring undocumented workers and benefiting from
immigration policies, Sensenbrenner spokesperson Jeff Lungren said, "I'm
unaware of these complaints."
Sensenbrenner's HR 4437 calls for "systematic surveillance of the
international land and maritime borders of the United States through
more effective use of personnel and technology, such as unmanned aerial
vehicles, ground-based sensors, satellites, radar coverage, and
cameras."
Sensenbrenner's Democratic opponent in the upcoming Congressional race
in Wisconsin's fifth district, Bryan Kennedy, has publicly asked
Sensenbrenner to divest himself of Halliburton and other companies he
believes benefit by hiring undocumented workers.
Sensenbrenner has criticized companies that profit from exploitative
working conditions that, he recently said, make it "cheaper to hire an
illegal alien than a citizen or a legal alien who is present in this
country with a green card."
Other investments raising flags in Milwaukee include the $44,179 in
shares Sensenbrenner holds in Darden Restaurants Inc. Darden operates
chains like The Olive Garden and Red Lobster, which have been reported
to employ undocumented workers. "Jose," a cook at a Red Lobster
restaurant in the Milwaukee suburb of Wauwatosa in Sensenbrenner's
district, was unaware that he was working for a company that made the
Congressman that proposed "el Muro" (the wall) richer. "I don't have
papers and had to cross the border from Mexico," Jose said. "Is he
schizophrenic? Does he like our work and hate us?"
Cristina Neumann Ortiz, a Sensenbrenner constituent who organized the
largest marches in Milwaukee history in response to HR 4437, finds
typical the alleged contradiction between the congressman's
anti-undocumented immigrant policies and rhetoric and his
pro-undocumented stock portfolio. "This is a classic case of exploiting
workers. He (Sensenbrenner) is for their work while doing everything he
can to make sure that they don't get any rights. I see this among
exploitative employers. I see it in Congress."
After finishing his shrimp scampi at the Red Lobster restaurant in
Wauwatosa, Sensenbrenner constituent Jim Rehtman defended the
congressman. Rehtman was joined by his nephew, John, a tattooed trucker
who stood in the restaurant lobby wearing a T-shirt with a large
American flag that read "Welcome to America...NOW LEARN ENGLISH."
"I support what he's doing to try to stop those illegals," said Rehtman,
a 73-year-old retired welder.
Asked how he felt about the fact that his food may have been prepared by
one of the undocumented workers interviewed for this story, a cook in
the back kitchen, Rehtman leaned his head sideways, raised his shoulders
and said, "I don't like it. Not one bit. They shouldn't be back there.
That's why we need to change the laws." When told that Sensenbrenner,
who recently referred to employers of the undocumented as "21st-century
slave masters," was also an investor in the company that owned Red
Lobster, Rehtman shook his head.
"Car salesmen and politicians, they both..." He then stopped short. "I
don't want to insult car salesmen that way."
Roberto Lovato is a New America
Media writer based in New York. Contact at
Robvato@aol.com
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