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Mon Dec 01 2008
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Columns
Molly Ivins
Bush's immigration plan: same old big business blather
January 12, 2004
AUSTIN, Texas -- In Texas, where the border is a constant presence in our lives, no one is mistaking President Bush's immigration proposal for a brilliant new departure in immigration policy, or even for a ploy to get Hispanic political support. What we have here is the old bracero program, a guest worker program, and it primarily benefits one group and one group only -- big business. And that would be OK, if other parts of the program totaled up to a net improvement in the current situation. That's what we need to look at and weigh.
Even by normal standards of partisan journalism, there has been an awful lot of knee-jerk commentary on this proposal by people who don't seem to know how the underground economy works. Some liberals are dismissing the Bush proposal as nothing but politics, a way to get brownie points with Hispanics when it has no chance of going anywhere in Congress. Seems to me we owe Bush the benefit of the doubt on this, and it may not even be smart politically: The program would grant temporary legal status to about 8 million immigrants, but it's not going to make the 9 million Americans who are out of work happy, and some of them vote.
The proposal has merit as a way to deal with future immigrants, said Eliseo Medina, executive vice president of the Service Employees International Union. "If I'm sitting in Mexico thinking about coming north for a job, this makes sense to me. But if I'm already here, it makes no sense. This is a way to deal with future flows of immigration, but it means the (8 million to) 11 million already here are never going to be legalized. These are people who have been here 15, 20 years, paying taxes, having children part of the community. They're talking about apples and oranges."
Longtime workers would not automatically be put on the path to obtaining citizenship or even permanent resident status. They would further logjam a system that already takes up to 10 years. Bush, who proposes to cut domestic spending again this year, made no mention of how to pay for the new program.
Realistically, the bureaucratic hassles of getting 8 million to 11 million people biometric cards and then reviewing them in three years makes the whole idea silly. Try a cost estimate on that. From the undocumented worker's point of view, the proposal actually makes things worse by making their legal status dependent on their employers: If the temporary worker quits or gets fired, he is subject to deportation. This makes the workers incredibly vulnerable to exploitation, effectively indentured servants, as Susan Martin, an immigration expert at Georgetown University, put it. The possibilities for abuse in that situation are horrifying. Plus, the temporary cards offer no way to a more regular status.
But a positive initiative in the proposal would allow guest workers to take the payments they have made to Social Security and IRAs back to Mexico with them. This would fix, at least for the guest workers, the ugly situation we have now where undocumented workers pay into Social Security but never get any benefits from it. That really is just theft, since Social Security payments are taken from pay they have earned. That situation could also be fixed by a totalization agreement, which we have with other countries around the world and need with Mexico. If a Mexican citizen has earned enough here to qualify for Social Security benefits, they should be sent to him in Mexico.
Another obvious flaw in the program is that companies seeking guest workers have to "prove" that the jobs they offer will not be taken by American citizens. Think about what that would actually take. The Bush proposal is that the jobs be put on a government website -- if there are no takers here, you get to import a Mexican worker. You really have to wonder who Bush thinks is on the Internet.
The most moving part of Bush's speech was this passage: "We see millions of hardworking men and women condemned to fear and insecurity in a massive undocumented economy. ... Decent, hardworking people will now be protected by labor laws with the right to change jobs, earn fair wages and enjoy the same working conditions that the law requires for American workers."
It's always hard to know if Bush doesn't know or he doesn't care, but under his administration, Americans themselves are less and less protected by labor laws, including fair wage laws and working conditions, because Bush keeps cutting the enforcement staff at the Department of Labor and OSHA.
Bush also said in the future enforcement would be stepped up against companies that hire illegal workers. This old song has played too many times. The way it works, as in the recent case with Wal-Mart, is the feds sweep in, arrest the minimum wage workers, put them in jail and threaten them with deportation. Executives of Wal-Mart do not get arrested.
To find out more about Molly Ivins and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
COPYRIGHT 2004 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
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Don't forget to check out articles from 2007 and 2008 
Molly Ivins
"Yup, 2004" December 29, 2004
"Liberals and libertarians unite! " December 22, 2004
"Merry Christmas!" December 22, 2004
"More waste from the 'reality-based community'" December 16, 2004
"The problem of American torture" December 2, 2004
"Goody, goody, gumdrop" November 30, 2004
"A few political developments" November 25, 2004
"I'm jaw-dropped, you've-got-to-be-kidding mad" November 23, 2004
"Look at it this way" November 21, 2004
"Pay some attention" November 21, 2004
"A long four years" November 17, 2004
"Awwww, Ashcroft!" November 11, 2004
"What Is to Be Done?" November 9, 2004
"Don't mourn, organize" November 4, 2004
"My money down: Kerry over Bush" October 28, 2004
"No idea how much fun and slime you are missing" October 27, 2004
"Sinclair Group and Mark Hyman" October 18, 2004
"Four more years?" October 18, 2004
"Bush thinks we're dumb" October 12, 2004
"It never occurred to him?" October 5, 2004
"Other Stuff" October 2, 2004
"Twilight Zone of Wonderland" September 28, 2004
"Another example of how you're being suckered" September 23, 2004
"Media Watch Alert" September 20, 2004
"When it's not a swing state" September 20, 2004
"Ben Barnes" September 11, 2004
"And so it goes..." September 8, 2004
"Unmitigated gall" September 2, 2004
"Another record" August 30, 2004
"One good laugh" August 26, 2004
"Labor Day surprise!" August 23, 2004
"Before the war..." August 19, 2004
"Nice, polite, calm..." August 15, 2004
""Look at Nelson Mandela"" July 22, 2004
"Not in this lifetime for Clinton" July 14, 2004
"What ever happened to the Constitution?" July 10, 2004
"Happy birthday, America!" July 1, 2004
"Real beauts in the hypocrisy department" June 29, 2004
"Governments lie. So what?" June 23, 2004
"Not easily discouraged" June 18, 2004
"Don't you feel better now?" June 16, 2004
"Justifying torture" June 10, 2004
"Word and Deed" June 8, 2004
"Just the facts, ma'am" June 2, 2004
"What the Bush administration is really about" June 1, 2004
"Depressing as divorce" May 28, 2004
"Why did Abu Ghraib happen?" May 21, 2004
"Killing them for their own good" May 18, 2004
"Let's get real" May 7, 2004
"A glass half empty " May 4, 2004
"March for women's lives" April 29, 2004
"Sinners of Texas, unite!" April 29, 2004
"A charming little Bush thesis" April 22, 2004
"She is still strong and invincible " April 20, 2004
"Bush's primetime press conference" April 15, 2004
"America, an amazing country " April 12, 2004
"Death of democracy" April 8, 2004
"A mess " April 6, 2004
"Strange peaches" April 1, 2004
"Brainwashing season " March 31, 2004
"Beware the wrath of the birding legions " March 29, 2004
"A responsibility" March 25, 2004
" Saving us from corporate criminals " March 22, 2004
"Lying liars . . . " March 17, 2004
"Good, high-payin' jobs " March 15, 2004
"Sailing on the Voucher Boat " March 10, 2004
"Not any smarter" March 8, 2004
"A candidate" March 4, 2004
"Don't hit the hornets' nest" March 2, 2004
"Freddie and Fannie" February 25, 2004
"Either you're with us, or with the teacher's union" February 24, 2004
"Raising hell " February 11, 2004
"Sexing Up" February 9, 2004
"Who's the real madman? " February 9, 2004
"Think tank extraviganze" January 29, 2004
"Iowa results " January 22, 2004
"The union's finances" January 20, 2004
"Why are we going to do it again?" January 15, 2004
"Bush's immigration plan: same old big business blather" January 12, 2004
"Cheerleader Conspiracy" January 8, 2004
"The Hidden News " January 7, 2004
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