| Bush Bill Would Aid
Mexico's Meddling in U.S.
By Mark Krikorian
Newsday
February 18, 2004
There has been much well-deserved criticism of President
George W. Bush's proposed amnesty and guestworker plan. But its possible effect
on America's sovereignty has seldom been mentioned, even though that may be the
most harmful in the long term.
Although the president's proposal is not specific to Mexico, it would benefit
that nation the most. Some 5 million of the estimated 8 million illegal aliens
here are Mexican, and Mexico would likely be one of the main sources of the new
guestworkers and increased permanent immigration also called for in the Bush
plan.
This is important because, in the 1990s, Mexico embarked on a campaign of
extending its political authority into the United States - not just over Mexican
immigrants, but also naturalized and native-born Americans of Mexican ancestry.
There are 10 million Mexican-born people in this country (including 5 million
illegals) plus more than 10 million additional Americans of Mexican descent.
Now, this is not the fantasy of reconquista - retaking the Southwest, lost in
the 1846-'48 Mexican War. Instead, it is an attempt to set up a special status
for people of Mexican origin, like the status Europeans enjoyed in China in the
19th century.
There's nothing secret about this effort. President Vicente Fox once referred to
himself as president of all 118 million Mexicans - the 100 million in Mexico and
the (then-)18 million in the United States, the majority of whom are U.S.
citizens. And this is a long-term proposition for them: In June 2001, Juan
Hernandez, former head of Fox's cabinet-level office for relations with Mexicans
abroad, said on ABC's "Nightline," "I want the third generation, the seventh
generation, I want them all to think, 'Mexico first.'"
There are several elements to the Mexican government's campaign:
Dual citizenship. In order for an immigrant to become an American, he
must renounce all other political allegiances. But our government has been
remarkably nonchalant about this and, in response, Mexico in 1997 passed a law
allowing for a form of dual citizenship. Mexico will soon permit voting from
abroad, perhaps in time for the 2006 presidential election, meaning that
potentially millions of dual nationals would be able to vote in both countries.
Already, a number of dual citizens have won public office in Mexico, including a
member of Mexico's Congress. A tiny number of dual citizens may be little more
than an irritant; huge numbers of them represent a political crisis.
Consular network. Mexico has more consulates in the United States than
any country has in any other, 45 at last count. These offices don't just promote
Mexican exports and help tourists in trouble - they play an active role in
domestic American politics, lobbying local officials to promote acceptance of
the Mexican government's illegal-alien ID card, driver's licenses and in-state
tuition for illegal aliens, and other issues. This interference in America's
internal affairs has become so extensive that Mexican consuls often don't even
pretend to be mere representatives of a foreign government. Mexico's former
consul in Atlanta, for instance, actually helped found a local Hispanic
political organization then, upon his retirement from Mexico's foreign ministry,
stayed in Atlanta and became head of the group.
IDs for illegals. One of the biggest problems for illegal aliens is their
lack of identification; it prevents them from getting driver's licenses or bank
accounts and leads police to inquire into their legal status when stopped for
traffic violations. This is a good thing, because making life difficult for
illegal aliens is one important part of any successful effort to prevent illegal
immigration.
But the Mexican government rejects our attempts at enforcing immigration
controls and has launched a successful effort to get the Mexican consular
registration card - known as the matricula consular - to be acknowledged by many
banks and local governments.
Acceptance of this card confers a quasi-legal status on illegal aliens, partly
shielding them from detection and incorporating them even more completely into
our national life.
Mexico's efforts to extend its authority over a large part of the American
population represents the most serious threat to our sovereignty since the Civil
War. The president's amnesty/guestworker proposal, which would lead to vastly
increased legal (and, inevitably, illegal) immigration from Mexico, would hugely
accelerate this trend.
Mark Krikorian is executive director of the
Center for Immigration Studies.
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