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June 21, 2006
Hey Mike Pence! Amnesty Is The Absence Of
Punishment—Not The Presence of Reward!
By Bryanna Bevens
[See also:
Pence
Ploy Part II: Security, Smugglers And Scapegoats]
After running a campaign focused almost entirely on
immigration reform,
Brian Bilbray was elected to Congress last week.
The results have emboldened his new colleagues.
Once-cautious Congressmen in vulnerable seats now seem
comfortable running for re-election on the
enforcement-only House bill that passed last December.
Top news from Google as I write this:
House Stalls Immigration Reform, Compromise Bill Not
Likely Before November Elections (by Gil
Kaufman, MTV.COM, 6/21/06).
So it looks like
Joe Guzzardi was
right and
Peter Brimelow was
wrong (for now)…we can all say bye-bye to that
atrocious Senate Sellout.
But the threat of
bad immigration policy still looms large.
Beware the
Compromise!!
Our attention must now turn to the
Pence Ploy—the alleged "compromise"
miraculously proposed at the last minute by Congressman
Mike Pence and widely whooped-up as a way of
outflanking immigration patriots in the House.
It’s finally available (DISCUSSION
DRAFT, in PDF) and I have read its 300 or so
pages—something no MSM types will do.
Before I begin, let me make something clear:
Amnesty is the absence
of punishment, not the presence of reward.
Any immigration bill is absolutely an amnesty
bill unless
it sends back home the millions of illegal aliens in
the United States today.
To deny them
"a clear path to citizenship"
is not a punishment—anymore than not
giving your children cookies when they bite you.
Punishment
is more like…well, beating them without mercy—the kids,
not the illegal immigrants…actually, I’ll have to think
about that one.
Speaking of the Pence Ploy…
I
have decided that my assessment of the Senate
immigration bill was wrong.
The McKennedy bill is not the worst piece of
legislation I have ever seen…the Pence Ploy wins that
title.
Don’t misunderstand me, the Kennedy-Bush-McCain bill is
definitely the evil spawn of an
unholy alliance. But it makes no attempt to conceal
that fact.
On the other hand, Congressman Pence is a well-liked man
with impeccable conservative credentials…many of his
colleagues will not feel compelled to read the contents
of his bill before supporting it.
But, while the Pence Plan has been touted as compromise,
upon a closer look, it is not.
NOT!!!
As a
political consultant and aide, I have read more of
these legal doohickeys than any sane person could
endure. And let me tell you, this one is long and
complicated.
This legislation would reorganize our entire immigration
system and require the restructuring of several
government agencies:
The Office of the
Attorney General, the
Department of Homeland Security, the
Social Security Administration, the…
Okay, basically all of them.
Additionally, it creates an entirely
new private sector industry and provides for all the
bureaucratic hoopla that goes with such an undertaking.
In other words, this legislation was not a quick
response to Congressional crisis…it was well-planned and
long in the making.
It wasn’t put together overnight. And I doubt Pence’s
small staff could have managed it without help…will the
real author please
step forward??
The Pence bill is so complex it will take two (2)
columns for me to properly convey the problems with it.
For today, we will focus on the biggies:
1. Securing the border…or not
Mike Pence has said repeatedly that his bill puts border
security first. In his op-ed for the
Wall Street Journal, he wrote
"[the
bill would]…require
the
Secretary of Homeland Security to certify
that all these border security measures are
substantially completed before any new guest worker
program would begin." [A
Middle Ground on Immigration,
June 11, 2006]
His bill does say
border security measures have to be
"substantially completed". But, tellingly, it does
not provide a definition of what that means.
So the HS Secretary could certify any absurd thing. How
absurd? Well, the Bush Administration already says
it’s acted to secure the border.
(Yeah, and my
driver’s license says I weigh 125 lbs…)
2. The new (supposedly) temporary guest worker
program
After securing the border, Pence says he wants to
implement a temporary guest worker program that is not
tantamount to amnesty.
Pence kindly defined amnesty in his speech at the
Heritage Foundation—before the bill text was
released. He said:
"Allowing 12 million illegal aliens to stay in our
country instead of leaving and coming back legally is
amnesty, no matter if fines or back taxes are paid, or
how it is otherwise dressed up or spun by its
proponents. The only way to deal with these 12 million
people is to insist that they leave the country and come
back legally if there’s a willing employer waiting in
this country to put them to work."
But the
Pence Plan does not accomplish this—not by a long
shot—and I’ll tell you why:
From
what I read, the Pence "leave the country for a week
and we’ll give you a visa" ploy is symbolic at best
and deceptive at worst.
These
are some of the major loopholes and/or drawbacks:
 | It creates a new
category of nonimmigrant Visa (as though we don’t
have enough) for temporary workers AND their spouses
and children [Sec. 1402 (a) (3)]. It’s called, to
add insult to injury, the “W” visa. |
(This
is very telling—importing dependants totally destroys
any economic rationale for guestworkers, since spouses
and children impose major health, education and welfare
costs on American taxpayers. It makes it clear that
Pence’s objective is to compel American taxpayers to
subsidize business’ remuneration of its workers.)
 | The program will
not begin for two years after the enactment
of the bill. In the meantime, it seems we are to
maintain the status quo and tolerate our massive
illegal immigrant population…and the millions
more who will come during that time!! |
 | Private employment agencies ("
Ellis
Island Centers") will be responsible for
screening applicants and issuing the work permits.
(This is the new industry and behemoth bureaucracy I
mentioned earlier. VDARE.COM’s
Ed Rubenstein has already
demonstrated that this will be a fraud-prone
feeding frenzy for firms with political friends.) |
 | For the
first three years, there are no limitations
on the number of these visas that can be issued!
This is WORSE than the Senate Sellout, which
currently caps Temporary Workers at 250,000. |
 | And any children
"temporary workers" have while they are in the
United States are…you guessed it, automatic U.S.
citizens under the current "anchor baby"
misinterpretation of the
14th Amendment. The Pence Ploy makes no
attempt
to
close this loophole. |
 | AND NOW THE
BIGGEST (in my opinion) LOOPHOLE:
The Secretary of HS may waive any of these
provisions if there is a humanitarian interest,
for the purpose of
family unity or if it is the public interest.
|
To recap: Three
things to remember—if you remember nothing else:
 | The new "W" visa
is available to anybody—the 12-20 million illegal
immigrants we have now and the rest of the
entire world. |
 | The new "W" visa
will be issued to the worker, their spouses and
their children. |
3.
Finally…it’s the WELFARE,
stupid!
The Pence Plan
does not reform
welfare subsidies to illegals—in fact, welfare
benefits will increase in tandem with our
immigrant population.
In fact, Pence
actually contains language specifying that this must be
the case—another reason that makes me doubt
conservatives wrote this bill.
Here it is, in black
and white:
"For purposes of
title IV of the
Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
Reconciliation Act of 1996, a nonimmigrant having
status under section 101(a)(15)(W) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act shall be treated as any other
nonimmigrant granted status under such Act."
Sorry, a little
jargon there but loosely translated, nothing changes—all
the welfare benefits currently enjoyed by
illegal aliens will continue.
All of the new
“temporary workers” get them as well.
And that’s it…that’s
the Pence program.
 | There is no
language in the Pence bill that requires the 12-20
million illegal immigrants in the U.S. to follow
this program. |
 | There is no
language which imposes a consequence on them if they
do not. |
Mike Pence is relying
solely on
employer sanctions to solve the problem. His theory
sounds like this:
1. If we fine the employer for hiring illegal
aliens, they will only hire foreign workers through the
Ellis Island Centers.
2. If the illegal aliens do not enroll in the
temporary worker program, they will be unable to find
work and consequently leave the country.
As for stopping
future illegal immigration, Mike Pence is relying on
increased penalties for
immigrant smugglers…no, I’m not joking.
But those are the
topics for my next column!
The Pence Plan is
just the latest example of Washington not taking this
issue seriously, But I’m no longer worried about it.
It’s clear that
Small Town, USA is giving up on the feds and
starting to take matters into its own hands.
For example: The City
Council of Hazelton, Pennsylvania just voted to revoke
the licenses of businesses that hire illegal aliens.
Additionally, they will impose a $1000 fine for any
landlord who rents property to illegal aliens. [Pa.
city poised for immigration crackdown, By
MICHAEL RUBINKAM, Associated Press, June 19, 2006]
Similar measures are
taking place in
San Bernardino, California and
Butler County, Ohio…etc., etc.
According to the
National Conference of State Legislatures, there were
more than 500 immigration reform bills introduced in
2006.
So quit making it
difficult, Congress!!
Eliminate the
incentives!!
No
job…no
place to live…no
free medical…no
free education and no
welfare means…NO MORE ILLEGAL ALIENS!!
Bryanna Bevens [email
her] is a political consultant and former chief of staff
for a member of the California State Assembly. |