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Immigration, Immigration

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Immigration, Immigration Reform, and the Restructuring of Mexican American Politics Mexican Americans and Politics Lecture 16 March 7, 2006 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Immigration, Immigration


1
Immigration, Immigration Reform, and the
Restructuring of Mexican American Politics
  • Mexican Americans and Politics
  • Lecture 16
  • March 7, 2006

2
Organizational Matters
  • No class on Thursday, March 9
  • Essay 2 returned today
  • Midterm returned next Tuesday
  • Essay 3 due next Tuesday, March 14
  • You may turn in the essay anytime next week by
    5 pm Friday, March 17 and I will count it as on
    time
  • Final quiz Thursday, March 16
  • It should take about 15 minutes

3
Immigration ReformHistorical Perspectives
  • Periods of Congressional reform
  • 1798 Alien and Sedition Acts
  • 1850s the Know Nothings
  • 1880s Chinese exclusion
  • 1880s-1910s Excluding categories of immigrants
    and narrowing naturalization
  • 1910s-1920s Literacy tests and National Origin
    Quotas
  • 1965 Ended national origin quotas
  • 1986 Employer sanctions and legalization
  • 1990s Limiting rights of immigrants and more
    rapid exclusion

4
What do These Periods of Reform Have in Common?
  • Generally, they narrowed, rather than expanded
    immigration opportunities
  • Exceptions 1850s (no change), 1965 (ended
    National Origin quotas), and, possibly, 1986
  • Responded to period of mass organizing and state
    efforts to change (restrict) immigration
  • Ongoing tension in American politics Economic
    and ethnic interests seeking immigrants and
    cultural conservatives and organized labor
    fearing the changes they bring
  • Reform generally took a number of years because
    of competing societal interests

5
Reform in Current Era Focus Unauthorized
Immigrants
  • 1986 (Immigration Reform and Control Act)
  • Legalization
  • Employer sanctions
  • 1990s / 2000s
  • Expanded border enforcement
  • 1996 (Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant
    Responsibility Act)
  • Expanded deportation of legal immigrants
  • 2001 (Patriot Act)
  • Indefinite detention of immigrants
  • Modern era no cap on legal immigration

6
Expansion of Federal Immigrant/ Immigration
Regulation
  • Yet, call for more control
  • Why?
  • Surge in both legal and unauthorized migration
  • Wide-spread perception that federal
    regulation/controls are ineffective
  • Diversity of immigrants (origins and
    destinations)
  • Fears of economic consequences of immigrants
    (lowering wage rates) and immigration (using
    benefits)
  • Similar concerns and demands for federal action
    have appeared in previous phases of reform

7
(No Transcript)
8
Class Activity
  • Lets assume for a minute that some reform is
    needed and that reform means reform a
    comprehensive solution to the problem
  • What parts of our our current immigration policy
    needs to be changed and why?
  • What will have to be part of a comprehensive
    solution?
  • In other words, what will have to be part of a
    compromise immigration bill?

9
Whats Being Proposed? 1
  • Bush proposal (2004)
  • Guest workers
  • House bill (passed 2005)
  • Fence
  • Unauthorized status a felony
  • Employer penalties
  • Authorizes use of the military to enforce
    immigration law
  • No guest worker program
  • No legalization

10
Whats Being Proposed? 2 (Senate)
  • All call for added enforcement and some guest
    worker authorization
  • Specter (R-PA)
  • Permanent work visitor (blue card)
  • Cornyn (R-TX) / Kyl (R-AZ)
  • Short guest worker period (2 yrs), with return in
    between renewals
  • Current undocumented must return to home country
    get guest worker visa
  • Kennedy (D-MA) / McCain (R-AZ)
  • Longer guest worker period (3 yrs) / can apply
    from U.S.
  • Opportunity to legalize

11
Can Compromise Be Reached?
  • Eventually, yes
  • Concerns in the electorate will keep the issue on
    the table
  • Some new members of Congress will owe their
    elections to popular immigration concerns
  • This year? Seems unlikely
  • Senate Judiciary Committee needs to develop a
    consensus position
  • Key is Senator Cornyn (R-TX)
  • Then, it must compromise with House
  • Senate less restrictive than House (more
    sympathetic to business/ethnic lobby position)
  • Hard and harder

12
Immigration Reform and Mexican American Politics
  • Mexican American community divided (patterns
    weve seen throughout course)
  • Sensitivity to needs of immigrants/family members
  • Concern about competition for jobs, housing, and
    other services and about majority stereotypes
  • Perhaps of more concern
  • Little Mexican American/Latino voice in the
    debate
  • Mexican American/Latino organizations not
    mobilizing on immigration issues
  • Mexican American/Latino legislators not key
    players in Congressional debates

13
Consequences are Quite Large for the Community
  • Positive Legalization
  • Engine of empowerment and electoral growth
  • Provides added protections for U.S.-born family
    members
  • Negative Legally recognized temporary status
  • The longer it continues, the more it creates a
    legal underclass that becomes central to the
    economy (and shifts the position of capital in
    immigration debates)
  • The more it is likely to divide Mexican
    America/Latino communities internally

14
For Next Class
  • When do Mexican Americans (and other Latinos)
    join in multi-racial coalitions?
  • Why?
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