| The Latest Amnesty
McCain and Kennedy Make a Bad Pair on Immigration
By Mark Krikorian
National Review
June 6, 2005
Sens. John McCain and Ted Kennedy recently unveiled
legislation that would give legal status -- amnesty -- to 10 million illegal
aliens, and create a guest-worker program to admit even more foreign workers.
They have an impressive collection of congressional supporters and interest
groups behind them. But a bipartisan endorsement list can't hide the fact that
this bill is a hoax we've seen before.
In essence it is the same as the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act:
amnesty up front for millions of illegal aliens, and promises to enforce
immigration law. Such promises are quickly abandoned -- but in 1986, people
didn't know that yet.
There was a sense then that the reform was a grand bargain -- closing the back
door by prohibiting the employment of illegal immigrants for the first time
ever, but tying up the loose ends of prior policy missteps with an amnesty. But
that bargain was never consummated. Over a period of several years, nearly 3
million illegal aliens (from a total of 5 million at the time) received amnesty,
but the centerpiece of the enforcement side of the deal -- the prohibition on
employing illegals -- could not possibly succeed, since the immigration service
was not required to develop a system enabling legitimate businesses to determine
who was actually authorized to work. Even this deeply flawed system managed to
keep some illegals from getting hired, but that outcome only incensed the
anti-borders crowd, which successfully lobbied for the system's abandonment a
few years later.
The result of the amnesty was completely predictable: a profusion of fraudulent
documentation, a doubling of the illegal population (to more than 10 million),
and the normalization of illegal immigration, something that had been widely
considered unacceptable only a few years before.
This is what McCain and Kennedy have repackaged and are trying to sell. The
amnesty part of their proposal works this way: Illegal aliens are dubbed legal
workers, and after a six-year period of indenture -- plus some fines, background
checks, and an English and civics test -- they (and their families) get green
cards. This is similar to how the last amnesty worked, except for the six-year
wait; the 1986 law amnestied those who had already entered the country before a
certain date, some four years prior to the law's passage. Thus the
McCain-Kennedy proposal is a prospective amnesty, while the 1986 measure was a
retrospective amnesty.
The bill's guest-worker provision allows 400,000 new foreign workers a year,
with an escalator clause if businesses snap up the cheap, docile workers faster
than expected. These "temporary" workers would have to serve only a four-year
period of indenture before they, too, could get green cards. To accommodate
them, legal-immigration quotas would be increased by that 400,000 per year.
The enforcement sections of the bill are laughably thin. The section on border
security is almost a parody of a Washington cop-out: It orders up yet another
"National Strategy for Border Security" (rather than picking one of the previous
strategies and implementing it), plus an advisory committee, two coordination
plans, and various other reports and programs and multilateral partnerships.
Other provisions almost seem intended to hobble enforcement. Though the law
provides for a system to verify employment eligibility, it instructs the Social
Security Administration to reinvent the wheel rather than simply expand on the
successful pilot system that the immigration service has been developing for
over a decade. The job of auditing firms for compliance with the immigration law
would be taken away from immigration agents and given to the Labor Department,
perhaps the only agency even less capable of doing it. And the bill specifically
says that it does not give state and local cops any new authority to enforce
immigration law.
Supporters of the McCain-Kennedy proposal deny that it's an amnesty, pointing to
the fact that illegals must pay a modest fine before they are legalized. But
since the goal of an illegal immigrant is to enter and stay in the United
States, anything that legalizes his presence is a reward; the fine is just a
retroactive smuggling fee paid to the U.S. government.
Even the French have figured all this out. Dominique de Villepin, France's
interior minister, was asked recently whether his country would stage another
amnesty, as it did in 1981 and 1997. "It's out of the question," he said. "Each
time, it creates a chain reaction and a wave of new arrivals."
Each of the McCain-Kennedy proposal's two elements is based on a false premise:
The amnesty portion assumes that the only choices before us are mass roundups or
legalization, and the guest-worker section assumes that our vast, 21st-century
economy can't function without a constant flow of high-school dropouts from
overseas. Neither of these assumptions is true. Only a policy of attriting the
illegal population through consistent, comprehensive enforcement will enable us
to manage immigration successfully in the long run, as the free market replaces
illegal workers with a mix of higher wages and mechanization.
Despite the long list of interest groups behind the McCain-Kennedy amnesty, its
odds aren't good. John Cornyn, chairman of the Senate's immigration
subcommittee, doesn't like it; he contrasted the bill's "work and stay" approach
to his preferred model of "work and return," which would import millions of
foreign workers in the (mistaken) belief that they would go home when their
contracts expired.
What's more, the Senate recently defeated a more narrow amnesty proposal from
Senators Kennedy and Larry Craig that would have given legal status to
illegal-alien farm workers and their families. That smaller plan was backed by
the industry groups most passionately seeking amnesty. But if there weren't
enough votes to pass it in the Senate that time, the much broader McCain-Kennedy
amnesty is an even longer shot.
On the House side, a new pro-borders majority among Republicans, energized by
its victory on the Real ID Act, will fight the amnesty tooth and nail. The White
House, meanwhile, is concerned that supporting this bill -- which is an amnesty
even by the president's narrow definition -- could cause a "read my lips"-style
blowup among conservatives.
Perhaps most important, the public is increasingly concerned about immigration.
Although immigration has rarely been among the top two or three issues for
voters, that seems to be changing. Recurrent reports of terrorists and
super-violent gang members exploiting our broken immigration system are finally
getting people's attention. The Arizona-based Minuteman border-watch program's
resonance on talk radio, its spread to other states, and its embrace by
prominent politicians like California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger are all
signs that the McCain-Kennedy amnesty may well be the last gasp of the
anti-borders crowd.
Mark Krikorian is Executive Director of the
Center for Immigration Studies.
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