Friday, 22 May 2009

Protect The Working Poor Like The Rich

Right Democrat has this, by Froma Harrop, from the Houston Chronicle:

While the recession has rattled every rung of the 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.

Right Democrat adds:

Harrop is right. Illegal immigration lowers wages. That is why United Farm Workers founder Caesar Chavez was a strong advocate of immigration enforcement.

Progressive radio talk host Thom Hartmann notes:

The reason why thirty years ago United Farm Workers' Union (UFW) founder Caesar Chavez fought against illegal immigration, and the UFW turned in illegals during his tenure as president, was because Chavez, like progressives since the 1870s, understood the simple reality that labor rises and falls in price as a function of availability.

In 1969, Chavez and members of the UFW marched through the Imperial and Coachella Valley to the border of Mexico to protest growers' use of illegal aliens as temporary replacement workers during a strike. Joining him on the march were both the Reverend Ralph Abernathy and U.S. Senator Walter Mondale. Chavez and the UFW would often report suspected illegal aliens who served as temporary replacement workers as well as who refused to unionize to the INS.

Working Americans have always known this simple equation: More workers, lower wages. Fewer workers, higher wages.

2 comments:

  1. Los Angeles has deteriorated since the 60's, it's hard for a person who original lived here even recognizes it. As I have to stay here with relatives for a while, my son needed to locate a school. My eyes opened wide to find the educational system is in a terrible mess. I even looked up to see if the American flag was really flying over the school. Sad but true the demographics showed that the majority of the children came from South of the border and within in it's midst hardly any of 4th graders spoke recognizable English. I learned the majority received free breakfast and lunch, because the parents couldn't afford to feed them.

    It's hard to blame the children, but my son is getting a second class education in this overcrowded chaos called a school. It shows our borders are not secure, that our country has been overwhelmed by the negligence of our corrupt politicians catering to corporate greed. Coming back to Southern California has turned me into an advocate for the pro-sovereignty, anti-illegal alien organizations. Los Angeles has turned into a sewer of criminal aliens running rampant with little or no prosecution because of a Sanctuary city policy. filthy streets scattered with fast food wrappers and not the place not to bring up children. City councilor Andronovich stated that $ 11. billion can be attributed to every illegal alien, who breaks into America, get a free lunch on the taxpayers in Los Angeles county. It's run by a a corrupt mayor, who is directed by an even worse bunch of crooked legislators in Sacramento. This ominous pestilence of corruption has been spreading across the country.

    LA has become a breeding ground for a society, turning slowly into a banana republic. The true Angeleno's are hardly aware that their taxes are being drained by illegal aliens and their extended families, swarming here to take advantage of Americans. Legal Los Angeles inhabitants needs to demand a Permanent E-Verify from their government. The system will uncover the illegal workers, opening job opportunities for US workers. Over a period of time rejected by business and not able to find work, the exodus by ATTRITION will begin. American wages must go up and perhaps the elitists, will see through their avarice that American industry is better than importing cheap labor or exporting jobs overseas. Citizens and legal residents must do their part, because they have the ultimate power to--CHANGE THE FUTURE--because otherwise we will sink in a quagmire of multiculturalism, balkanization that has caused massive unrest and demonstrations in Europe. If we allow another AMNESTY our country will turn into a seething cauldron of frustration and anger. When billions of your tax dollars are spent to pacify open border entities, its up to the American public to fight back. Demand E-Verify from your cringing Senators http://www.senate.gov and Congressman at (202) 224-3121 who see you as a--CASHCOW-- for illegal foreign labor and corrupt foreign governments.

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  2. First of all, e-verify may be a possible solution, but interestingly, the Wall Street Journal doesn’t agree. They say that the error rate is too high, especially for foreign-born workers.

    The Congressional Budget Office says that it will cost us $17.3 billion in tax money over the next ten years, because the illegals will just be paid under the table.

    The simple solution is just to enforce the laws already on the books. Not by arresting the illegals - just fine the businesses who hire them. Make the fines big enough that they'll think twice before hiring an illegal alien. But nobody seems willing to do that.

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