Sunday, June 16, 2013

Immigration Reform and the Republican Party


Sometimes I do not like the realities of the times we live in, but accepting facts is far better than living in denial or the Land of Should.

Offering legal status to most of the estimated 11 million people in U.S.  on U.S. soil in violation of our laws will happen. It may happen now or a year from now, but it will happen.  It will also happen without stopping the tide of illegal immigrants.

Most Democrat and Republican voters recognize the inevitability of immigration reform. 

Corporations packed the bill with plenty of goodies so that they can continue and expand the current law that allows corporations to bring in relatively cheap worker under the guise of ‘we cannot find Americans to do the job’ because they lack the math, science, engineering, and programming skills. Corporations know that Americans could fill most of those jobs. That is why they insist that they should not be required to offer those jobs to Americans. Under current (and future) law there is no requirement to even advertise for those job openings before importing workers. So the big money wants the bill to pass because they will continue to be able to shaft the American workers and the number of American workers shafted will increase as they get their little nugget (more Hxxx visas).

Many Americans want a legal status and a path to citizenship for the 11 million. I am one of them. This shadow community of exploited workers is a disgrace. While there is a lot of talk about the immigrant law-breaker there is almost no discussion of the U.S. policies that enabled and encouraged illegal workers. Some people made the decisions that led to this situation. Somebody understaffed and manipulated the Border Patrol so that this situation could exist. Yet there is not even a squeak of an outcry for the heads of those politicians, bureaucrats, and campaign contributors. There is barely an outcry against employers.

Most voters do not realize that there is little in the proposed law that will make any significant changes to discourage illegal immigration. In fact, the current bill includes a requirement that only certain known areas of illegal entry into the United States will even be prosecuted! Even a child in a snowball fight knows that if one area is heavily defended, to move to another area. I can almost hear a Mexican saying, “You must be kidding! The United States will not prosecute all of us unless we cross at these places? Their own law only commits resources there? Follow me to Del Rio!”

Employers of small groups of illegal aliens (think almost every small construction company in America) will continue to enjoy the current policy of not being prosecuted. The Obama Administration has a written policy of not going after small companies that employ illegal aliens and there is nothing in the proposed bill to change that policy.

Sometimes a well intended strength of our Constitution, the separation of powers, causes huge problems. Congress enacts laws and it is up to the President, through executive powers, to enforce the laws. A partial solution is for Congress to create a law so exacting that failure to enforce the law would result in Impeachment. The current bill is so lax that it is a disgrace.

More plans for a fence and more plans for increased Border Patrol are required months after the bill becomes law. The term, secure border, is used without specific definition and there is not one word in the bill about actually reducing illegal immigration or the hiring of illegal immigrants.

Yet, the law will pass. Most people want immigration reform and I doubt that 1% of America will read the bill that is proposed. If the Republicans fight the bill they can forget the presidency for at least another two or three elections. In fact, the Party might become so irrelevant that it will be replaced. This is simple mathematics. People are weary of this issue and want some form of resolution. The Hispanic voters will continue to increase with or without this bill. A firm anti-Republican Hispanic voter block will crush the Party. It already may be too late.

I don’t like the facts, but they are the facts. Those that want to stand in the middle of a tornado and shout that it is just a little wind will be blown away. Accept the facts, adapt and move on. Of course there is the small possibility that the Republicans could propose a bill that makes sense to everyone, but that is not going to happen.

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