During his campaign, President Bush promised Hispanic voters that if
re-elected he would "reform" immigration, which means he would provide
three-year work visas for an undetermined number of the millions of
illegal immigrants that presently reside in the United States. These so
called guest workers could then apply for permanent legal status provided
their employers assure government officials that the jobs the guest
workers held could not be filled by Americans.
Labor unions and conservatives oppose the proposed reform because they
believe it would encourage illegal immigration, take jobs away from
American workers, give employers too much say in deciding the fate of the
illegal immigrants, and because it essentially is an amnesty program for
undocumented workers. President Bush declared that he was not swayed or
deterred by these arguments because the only jobs affected will be those
that Americans are unwilling to fill and because his proposal is a worker
program, not an amnesty program. President Bush also maintains that
legalizing the flow of worker immigrants into this country would free up
the Border Patrol and allow them to concentrate on drug smuggling and
other security concerns.
First of all, it is acknowledged that there are millions of illegal
immigrants presently in this country. If the Border Patrol is presently
preoccupied with stemming their flow at the expense of addressing drug
smuggling or other security concerns, then they aren’t doing any aspect of
their job very well. The Border Patrol’s primary job is to prevent illegal
entry into our country. You do not enhance one aspect of this job by
ignoring another. The opposite is true, if you improve your performance at
interdicting one kind of illegal interloper, you necessarily improve your
performance at interdicting all kinds of illegal interlopers whatever
their reason for crossing the border. To put this another way, if I were a
terrorist intent upon entering the United States to do mayhem and I knew
that illegal immigrant workers were not being intercepted by the Border
Patrol, then I would enter the country posing as an illegal immigrant
worker.
President Bush is also dreadfully wrong when he argues that the only
jobs affected will be those that Americans are unwilling to fill. To be
sure, there are many undesirable jobs in this Nation, but they are
undesirable for two reasons; the nature of the work and the level of
associated pay. Therefore, the problem of unfillable jobs is one more of
compensation than the nature of the work performed and from this, it
should be clear that if the level of pay of any job is raised high enough
it will always be possible to find workers to fill it. This is especially
true when so many people are presently unemployed because of the
outsourcing of manufacturing jobs. The converse is also true. If you have
a job where the nature of the work is acceptable or desirable, the job
will become unfillable if the pay offered is lowered a certain degree.
This truth is being ignored by George Bush.
The real problem with letting illegal workers legally fill jobs is that
employers will be able to offer far less money for existing jobs across
the employment spectrum and this will dissuade Americans from applying for
these jobs thus qualifying them for an illegal immigrant. Therefore, pay
scales for unskilled and semi-skilled work will decline in all sectors of
our economy as more and more jobs are filled by peasant labor willing to
work for lower pay. The end result of this is that to stay employed,
Americans workers will be forced to accept less and less pay for the work
they do until, pay wise, they are on par with the illegal immigrants.
Thus, American workers will inevitably become low paid peasant workers.
Basic economics and the law of supply and demand deem that this is so.
President Bush maintains that his proposal is a worker program and not
an amnesty program. Here again the President uses half-truths and
inappropriate language to make his proposal seem more palatable. First of
all, the fundamental aspect of his proposal is to ignore the illegal
status of illegal immigrant workers. Beyond doubt, this constitutes
amnesty for employed illegal immigrants and future illegal immigrants who
find jobs when they get here. As a result, the number of immigrants who
would legally enter this country would depend strictly upon the wiles of
those who are able to illegally come here and the resourcefulness of
businessmen seeking to reduce the cost of their labor force. Congress,
national policy, and the Border Patrol will no longer be a part of this
all important equation.
President Bush is essentially correct when he describes his proposal as
being a "worker program", but he ignores the fact that he is not talking
about American workers, but instead, foreign workers who broke our laws to
get here. He also fails to clarify that what he really means by his
"foreign worker program" is an "employer program" that delivers cheap
foreign labor to American businesses at the expense of American workers.
Of course, President Bush could counter these points by pointing out that
cheaper labor will mean cheaper goods and services for American consumers.
But by doing so, he conveniently ignores the fact that American consumers
without jobs cannot afford to buy most goods and services no matter how
cheap they are.
In conclusion, the critics of George Bush’s immigration reform proposal
are woefully correct in their concerns. The President’s proposal is first
and foremost an amnesty program for those who broke the law to get here.
Furthermore, his proposal will greatly encourage illegal immigration and
take away a substantial number of jobs from American workers. However,
left unsaid by the proposal’s critics is that it will also result in lower
pay scales and reduced benefit packages for workers in all areas of our
struggling economy. This being the case, Bush’s proposal is anything but
immigration reform. Instead, it is an immigration free for all and another
example of a President who cares nothing for the people who pay his salary
and one who thinks nothing of helping outsiders plunder this Nation’s
wealth and heritage.