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Froma Harrop
Froma Harrop
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Illegal Immigration in Tough Times

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While the recession has rattled every rung of economic ladder, it has ravaged the bottom bars. Unemployment stands at just over 4 percent for college graduates but at nearly 15 percent for those lacking high-school diplomas. In poor black neighborhoods, it's around 30 percent and approaching Great Depression levels.

So let's talk about illegal immigration in a serious way. Even in good times, the large presence of undocumented workers hurts our low-skilled natives and legal immigrants. Given today's broken economy, it would seem unconscionable not to address the situation.

The Obama administration has launched some early immigration reforms, and they make sense. Notably, it has moved the brunt of enforcement away from the unauthorized workers and onto those who hire them.

Of all the players in this drama, the illegal immigrants are the least blameworthy. They are hard workers who took advantage of what any reasonable person would have seen as an open labor market.

That does not justify the continued hiring of them at the expense of our most vulnerable populations. Rest assured that if college grads were to flood illegally into this country and depress the salaries of Americans who make and write about policy, the laws would have been enforced long ago.

President Obama's new approach is more effective as well as more humane. It orders Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to impose fines and press criminal charges against employers who knowingly hire illegal immigrants. They may arrest workers only when the local U.S. attorney agrees to prosecute the bosses.

For such a policy to work long-term, there must be an easy way for companies to check the legal status of a new hire. And there is a way. E-Verify lets employers confirm a worker's information with the Social Security Administration database over the Internet.

Westat, an independent researcher, found that E-Verify cleared 96 percent of employees within 5 seconds.

Less than one half of 1 percent was not verified because of errors in the Social Security database. (Employers can't fire them while the mismatch is being contested.) The rest were illegal workers.

Advocates of open borders — both defenders of illegal immigration and cheap-labor businesses — have run a campaign to demonize E-Verify precisely because it does the job. It enables enforcement of the law without scenes of ICE agents hauling away poor foreigners in handcuffs.

We still await a comprehensive immigration plan, which would deal with the millions of illegals already established in this country. A "path to citizenship" for this group would be reasonable, but only if it's the last amnesty. That is, the E-Verify system would have to be in place so employers can't ignore the ban on hiring undocumented workers in the future.

The advocates hold that rather than stop the flow of undocumented workers, the United States should just keep legalizing everyone. Their argument is as follows: Wages for low-skilled jobs are dismal because employers can exploit illegal workers. Make them legal, and companies would have to improve pay and working conditions for all.

There's some truth in that, but you can't get around basic labor economics. From heart surgeon to street sweeper, every worker is subject to the law of supply and demand. The more people there are after the same number of jobs, the less anyone has to pay them.

The United States accepts 2 million legal immigrants a year, more than the rest of the world combined. No American has to apologize for drawing the line at illegal immigration.

Our working poor deserve the same protections against unfair competition that our doctors get. And in this economy, their need has grown desperate.

To find out more about Froma Harrop, and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2009 THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL CO.

DISTRIBUTED BY CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.

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Comments

4 Comments | Post Comment
I read your column on illegal immigration. A couple of things I disagree with is that everyone of the people who violated our border knew it is against the law for them to work here, and they come anyway. You said they are hard workers maybe some are I was just unlucky to not have worked with them. It is my belief that the really good ones are still in their own country trying to build it into America. Amnesty in 1986 is the reason we have this mess now. Granting amnesty then and the resulting chain migration has totally changed the dynamics of this country. Immigration is not about people coming from one country but from the whole world. We now have people from mostly one country marching in our streets flying their flag and calling us racist for not wanting amnesty that would also result in open borders. Please imagine what would happen if amnesty is granted and the chain migration would add an additional 60 to 80 million voters from Mexico. I am not opposed to immigration but am opposed to what the politicians are trying to do. The only solution to the illegal immigrants is to close the border and remove all of the illegals, and yes we very much need to put quotas on to insure that America has a diverse immigrant population. I have writen to many political leaders on why they would allow these people to violate our border and why they would give that many votes to one country, I have not gotten a response from any. My hope is that you will write a column on the effects of the 1986 amnesty has had on this country. Thank you for your article I look forward to reading more
Comment: #1
Posted by: Percy Mervyn
Sun May 17, 2009 7:30 AM
I think you made some good points in your column -- particularly that successful enforcement of laws against illegal immigration has to be directed at the folks who "invite" them here, namely the employers who connive to hire illegals, and the people who hire them for the day outside Home Depot!
However, I question the accuracy of your information regarding legal immigration. A quick check on Wikipedia suggest that US legal immigration is about 1 to 1.25 million per year. The EU admits about 1.8 million. And Canada admits 250,000 per year, which is higher than the US as a percentage of population. Perhaps we should increase the number of legal immigrants at the same time we work to eliminate illegal immigration.
Comment: #2
Posted by: Bill Jacobs
Mon May 18, 2009 3:51 PM
The age-old pesky U.S.-Mexico border problem has taxed the resources of both countries, led to long lists of injustices, and appears to be heading only for worse troubles in the future. Guess what? The border problem can never be solved. Why? Because the border IS the problem! It's time for a paradigm change.
Never fear, a satisfying, comprehensive solution is within reach: the Megamerge Dissolution Solution. Simply dissolve the border along with the failed Mexican government, and megamerge the two countries under U.S. law, with mass free 2-way migration eventually equalizing the development and opportunities permanently, with justice and without racism.
http://tlwinslow.weebly.com/megamerge-the-dissolution-solution.html
Comment: #3
Posted by: TL Winslow
Sat Jun 6, 2009 5:11 PM
The age-old pesky U.S.-Mexico border problem has taxed the resources of both countries, led to long lists of injustices, and appears to be heading only for worse troubles in the future. Guess what? The border problem can never be solved. Why? Because the border IS the problem! It's time for a paradigm change.

Never fear, a satisfying, comprehensive solution is within reach: the Megamerge Dissolution Solution. Simply dissolve the border along with the failed Mexican government, and megamerge the two countries under U.S. law, with mass free 2-way migration eventually equalizing the development and opportunities permanently, with justice and without racism.

Please read the details. Google "Megamerge Dissolution Solution".
Comment: #4
Posted by: TL Winslow
Sat Jun 6, 2009 5:12 PM
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