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Immigration, Guest
Workers and National Security
Robert S. Leiken
President Bush’s immigration reform proposal—the
centerpiece of which would be to grant legal status to
millions of undocumented workers in a “temporary worker”
program—has a number of flaws.
Such programs have been tried, not only in the United
States, but in
Western Europe.
Without exception, they have never worked as promised.
Instead of facilitating the temporary residence of
workers, they have ended up creating millions of
permanent residents and bureaucratic nightmares.
The president’s plan runs the risk of creating an
Athenian-style “metic” class—where millions of guest
workers enjoy legal status and some labor rights but are
disenfranchised as well as disconnected from the
communities in which they reside. And those who believe
that Mexicans legalized under this program would
eventually take the fruits of their labor and return
home need to study closely what happened with similar
programs in France and Germany. There, “guest” workers
from North Africa and Turkey became permanent residents;
human rights and immigration advocates lobbied for
amnesty and family reunification, so that young men who
were supposed to go home instead brought “home” with
them. That will surely happen here.
Unless President George Bush wrings joint responsibility
for our current insecure border from President Vicente
Fox in Monterrey, Mexico on Monday, his immigration
proposal will amount to a rank bid for cheap votes and
cheap labor. And because the proposal could muddle the
president’s messages of homeland security and limited
government, it may not even pay the anticipated
electoral dividends.
But what leverage will Bush retain in Monterrey now that
he has already unveiled his “bold” immigration proposal?
Actually, the President kept his most of his powder dry
by leaving open the terms of his proposal. There will be
a fee for becoming legal and a spell as a temporary
worker before permanent residence. But how high the fee
and how long the spell? How many temporary workers will
be accepted? And how many promised new immigrant visas
will be made available, and of those what will be the
Mexican share? All that will depend on negotiations with
Congress. Will the President be content to claim credit
with Latino voters for his “bold, new proposal,” while
he lets it languish in Congress?
There is a security dimension to what Mr. Bush is
proposing. The presence of some 8 to12 million illegal
aliens creates a huge market for fraudulent documents.
Several of the 9/11 hijackers procured phony credentials
from Salvadoran immigrants. Moreover, there is nothing
to prevent alien smugglers from packaging terrorists
among other illegal border-crossers. Not only does the
presence of millions of undocumented workers create an
“underground” within the United States that can be
exploited by terrorists and criminals, continued
smuggling of illegals across the border create routes
that can be used not only by those seeking a better life
in the United States, but those interested in bringing
in deadly cargoes (whether drugs or dirty bombs)
undetected.
Bush’s announcement gives him some leverage with Fox,
that in return for considering some form of legalization
for undocumented Mexicans already living and working in
the United States, the Mexican government would be
willing to take joint responsibility for border
security.
Any proposal with a chance of controlling illegals
depends on securing the Mexican border. We have tried to
do that unilaterally through an array of fences,
cameras, sensors and patrols. These measures have
channeled rather than stemmed the flow of illegals. It
has driven migrants away from urban areas into the
desert (and encouraged professional alien traffickers)
leading migrants to perish in the desert.
Mexico could
stop jeopardizing the lives of its citizens by putting
those dangerous zones off-limits, obliging travelers to
depart solely from authorized ports of exit. If those
ports were placed opposite zones currently patrolled on
the American side, the two countries could make the
border safe and secure and put some teeth in the Bush
proposal whose first principle is that “America must
control its borders.”
In the past, Mexicans insisted that Article 11 of the
Constitution which guaranteed the right of free travel
prohibited such measures, even though the article makes
it clear that the state has the power to regulate the
exercise of this right. When President Bush meets with
President Fox at the Summit of the Americas, he can make
it clear that any amnesty/legalization plan has no
chance of passing the Congress unless the border
security concerns are addressed.
Mexican federal officials and state governments quietly
have indicated willingness to undertake those
politically unpopular exit measures if their migrants
can become legal in sufficient number. Bush must gain
Vicente Fox’s commitment to monitored border
responsibility at the
Monterrey
economic summit next week.
The course of joint responsibility is the preferable one
because the other option-- deporting illegals and
unilaterally securing the border – would be an
administrative long-shot and a sure guarantee of Mexican
enmity. The last thing we need is a hostile southern
neighbor unwilling to help guard against terrorist
infiltration.
And for this program to work, it must be attractive
enough for current illegal immigrants to choose to
register and come forward to be documented and
registered, to eliminate that security risk—but not to
create incentives for new immigrants to cross the border
to take advantage of its benefits. This is where the
border security component comes in. And joint
responsibility offers a real way to put teeth behind
enforcement measures.
This cannot stop, however, with an immigration deal.
Ultimately, reducing cross-border flows depends on
Mexico’s own continued economic development. Mexico
must continue to pursue a whole host of fiscal, labor
and energy reforms that will encourage further capital
investment. (Indeed, given California’s own growing
energy crisis, one could envision a more symbiotic
relationship where increased investment in a reformed
and privatized Mexican energy sector could produce
additional supplies for a starved California market).
But getting a deal on immigration—that makes the border
secure—is an important first step.
Robert S. Leiken is
the director of the Immigration and National Security
Program at The Nixon Center.
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