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Democratic proposals
on Immigration not
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Democrats Reframe Debate on Immigration with Strong ENFORCEMENT!
WASHINGTON
(By Julia Preston, NYT)
May 1, 2010
―
The outline for an immigration overhaul
unveiled by Democratic senators this
week lays down a new starting point for
any national debate: tough immigration
enforcement. But perhaps more
significantly it reveals how politics
have shifted on the contentious issue.
The enforcement would be more
far-reaching than anything in place now
— or anything proposed by the
administration of President George W.
Bush.
It begins with “zero tolerance” for
immigrants trying to enter the country
illegally, by tightening border
enforcement and by barring them from
taking jobs in the United States.
“It shows how far the Democrats have
moved in terms of tougher and tougher
enforcement,” said Edward Alden, a
senior fellow at the Council on Foreign
Relations who studies immigration.
“Across the board you see language that
would be very comfortable in a proposal
written by Republicans.”
The move to a more security-minded
consensus comes as the Democrats and
their leader in the Senate, Harry Reid
of Nevada, face a challenging midterm
election season.
Democrats have joined Republicans in
seeking to avoid the mistakes of 1986,
when the last major overhaul gave
amnesty to more than three million
illegal immigrants, but enforcement
provisions were largely left out of the
final legislation.
The proposal’s prospects of coming up in
the Senate this year appear dim, after a
tough immigration law in Arizona further
polarized the national debate and
President Obama said this week that the
time might not be right.
Yet the outline, with many game-changing
measures that would broadly redesign the
system bringing immigrants to this
country, is likely to be the centerpiece
of the immigration discussion this year,
lawmakers and advocates said, whether or
not it comes to the floor of the Senate.
The “conceptual proposal,” as the
senators called it, is an outline, not a
draft of legislation. No Republican
signed on to it, not even Senator
Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, who
worked for months with Senator Charles
E. Schumer, Democrat of New York,
shaping sections of a potential bill.
Mr. Graham, in a statement with Senator
Jon Kyl, Republican of Arizona,
dismissed the blueprint, saying it
“promises everything to everyone.”
Senator John Cornyn of Texas, another
border state Republican, said the timing
of the outline “suggests that politics
rather than policy is driving the
train,” since it comes just before
nationwide rallies on Saturday by
advocate groups demanding progress from
Mr. Obama on the immigration overhaul.
The blueprint, written primarily by Mr.
Schumer, includes a proposal for a
Social Security card containing a
biometric chip that all workers,
including American citizens, would have
to present to an employer when being
hired.
The proposal was presented by Mr.
Schumer, Mr. Reid, Senator Robert
Menendez of New Jersey, Dianne Feinstein
of California and Richard J. Durbin of
Illinois. Employers would be responsible
for monitoring the immigration status of
potential hires much more closely than
they do now. Every employer would be
required to use a new verification
system, including a scanner at every
business to confirm the validity of the
Social Security cards of job applicants.
Conservatives, while supporting stronger
enforcement, have long opposed national
identity cards, or making the Social
Security card a de facto one.
Mr. Cornyn said the “emphasis on border
enforcement was certainly encouraging,”
but, he said, Congress should not wait
for the whole package to pass before
financing new border security measures.
As part of the enforcement system, the
outline calls for a national system to
register births and deaths, to eliminate
the fraudulent use by immigrants of
documents of people who have died.
It would establish a system to monitor
the departure of all immigrants as well
as their entry into the country. If
immigrants failed to leave when their
visas expired, the immigration
authorities would be required to deport
them quickly.
Immigration officials have said that
creating an exit system would be a vast
task that could take many years to
complete.
The proposal opens the door wider than
ever before to high-skilled immigrants.
It would offer permanent-resident
status, with a document known as a green
card, to every foreigner with an
advanced degree in science or technology
from an American university. It would
make it much easier for foreign students
in the sciences to stay in the United
States after they graduate, and
eliminate numerical restrictions that
have kept highly educated immigrants
from India and China waiting for many
years before becoming residents.
The outline would make it possible for
the spouses and other close relatives of
legal green-card holders to come
immediately to the United States,
reuniting many thousands of families and
eliminating a wait that now stretches to
eight years. It would create a
commission to monitor labor markets and
determine when the supply of foreign
workers should be raised or lowered.
Mr. Schumer “made an effort to fix every
piece of the system that doesn’t work
right,” said Paul Donnelly, an advocate
for legal immigrants.
Also for the first time, the Democrats’
proposal would recognize same-sex
relationships in allowing immigration.
In exchange for more enforcement, the
proposal offers a relatively simple path
to legal status for an estimated 11
million illegal immigrants. They would
register, admit their legal violation
and pay penalties and back taxes up
front. Then they would remain on
provisional status for eight years.
On Friday, different sides were weighing
in. Roman Catholic bishops embraced the
framework but strongly opposed the
benefits for same-sex couples. The
Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and
Refugee Rights said the proposal was
“heavily framed around enforcement.”
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