December 15, 2005
Will The GOP-Business Split On Immigration Produce Real Reform?
By
Donald A. Collins
It’s the Christmas season
and people are not very focused on the goings on here in
DC, but believe me the
business paymasters are hard at it with their
old buddies up on the Hill.
Still, we finally may be
getting the real
Congressional confrontation everybody who wants real
immigration reform has been working for.
As Jeffrey H. Birnbaum’s
December 14 Washington Post article [Immigration
Pushes Apart GOP, Chamber] put it:
“The House Republican
leadership and the nation's
business lobby, usually close allies, are battling
each other over the issue of immigration. In a rare
schism,
employer groups led by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
are pressing to kill a Republican-sponsored measure that
would require
businesses to verify that all of
their workers are in the United States legally and
would
increase penalties for hiring illegal employees.”
Long ago the technology
was available to
check social security numbers and verify if someone
was here legally. But of course, the threat that it
might actually be applied has these
powerful business forces screaming.
Birnbaum reports:
“The business groups contend
that the verification system, which has only been tried
in experimental form, is too mistake-prone to give
employers accurate results. They worry that, as a
result, companies might be subjected to steep and
misapplied penalties because of faulty computer
readouts, and that individuals might have their
working status jeopardized and their private
backgrounds scrutinized needlessly.”
Oh, c’mon! It just isn’t
that tough to find out if someone has
proper ID or not.
Theories and tactics
abound, but according to a December 5
Denver Post
story, in a bid to by pass critics, the Senate will
pass the
Bush amnesty plan and then merge it with the House
bill.
The GOP leadership’s new
strategy is to have the House only deal with the more
politically-palatable issue of increasing border
security and
clamping down on employers (the real question will
of course be
“how hard”). Then Republican leaders will get
the Senate to pass some form of a guest worker plan. [GOP
forms strategy to OK guest workers, by Anne C.
Mulkern]
After that vote, senators
and House members will merge the House border bill with
the Senate amnesty bill behind closed doors. The House
will then vote on some kind of guest worker bill. Oops.
Representative Tom
Tancredo (R-CO) says, “They are doing it this way
because they know in the House they will run into a buzz
saw and maybe
my name’s on it.” And he has 90 or so members
with him for reform.
Of course, my
own party, at least for the moment, the
open border party of America otherwise known as the
Democratic Party, may make common cause with the
lobbyists and help Bush loyalists put the amnesty
through.
If the employer sanctions
were really tough, perhaps some minor guest worker
provision would be a worthy compromise. But this is
really unlikely.
One ray of hope this time
around–we have had enough prior amnesties in the past 30
years to allow a huge influx of immigrants, perhaps as
many as 13 million of them illegally here now–might be
the relative security of Congressional office holders.
The fact that
98 percent of our House of Representatives were
reelected in the last cycle suggests that perhaps many
of them could show courage at this critical juncture.
Perhaps this is a
Pollyanna position on my part. But these members
know that
80 percent of their constituents want reform and
that should add backbone to potential backsliders.
Watch closely, folks, the
fun has just begun. Everyone now pays lip service to the
ideas of stopping illegal immigration. But converting
illegal aliens into guest workers is the name of the
Bush game. And he may well get away with it unless the
threat of real
future electoral pain can be made clear.
Donald A. Collins [email
him], is a freelance writer living in Washington DC and
a board member of FAIR, the Federation for American
Immigration Reform. His views are his own.