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- <text id=93TT1929>
- <title>
- June 21, 1993: Send Back Your Tired, Your Poor...
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 21, 1993 Sex for Sale
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- IMMIGRATION, Page 26
- Send Back Your Tired, Your Poor...</hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As illegal entries into the U.S. rise at a time of job shortages
- and budget woes, a backlash is gaining force
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by Laurence I. Barrett/Washington and David S. Jackson/San
- Francisco, with other bureaus
- </p>
- <p> Once the nation might have empathized with the Chinese immigrants
- pulled out of the waters off New York City last week. Like generations
- of previous newcomers, they believed the streets of the U.S.
- were paved with gold, and so they voluntarily crammed into the
- filthy hold of a ship for months at sea until it finally foundered
- off a Long Island beach, drowning six. In many ways they epitomized
- the "wretched refuse" of teeming foreign shores for whom, in
- Emma Lazarus' 1883 poem, the Statue of Liberty lifts her lamp
- beside the Golden Door.
- </p>
- <p> Unfriendly commentators seized on their plight to complain that
- the rules under which Chinese immigrants, in particular, can
- claim political asylum are overly generous. Under a Bush-ordered
- loophole in the law, Chinese who say they are victimized by
- Beijing's strict one-child population rules can enter the country.
- But only the melodramatic circumstances of their entry make
- the Chinese unusual. Latinos, Indians, Pakistanis, Arabs and
- others--especially those who get into the country illegally--are also unwelcome to Americans who find their cultures strange.
- In a country composed almost entirely of immigrants and their
- descendants, heavy majorities--around 70% in two polls last
- year--favor reducing the flow of people through the Golden
- Door.
- </p>
- <p> Nor are their sentiments entirely xenophobic. Many contend that
- at a time of slow job growth and pinched budgets for social
- services, the country simply cannot accommodate a flood of the
- world's "homeless, tempest-tost." Bette Hammond, spokeswoman
- for a California group calling itself STOP IT--for Stop the
- Out-of-Control Problems of Immigration Today--suggests a rewrite
- of Lazarus: "If the Statue of Liberty could speak, she would
- say, `Many of my people are jobless and homeless. My natural
- resources are fast disappearing from overcrowding and pollution,
- while my cities are full of crime. My domestic tranquillity
- is a thing of the past.' "
- </p>
- <p> Like many national trends, the anti-immigrant backlash is appearing
- first and strongest in California. The nation's most populous
- state is the biggest lure for illegal immigrants, mainly Mexicans
- who sneak, run, and tunnel across the frontier in numbers far
- greater than the border patrol can possibly control. They then
- compete for jobs in a state that has suffered deeper employment
- losses than most during the long national recession and limping
- recovery. Or so say the critics; allies of the immigrants insist
- they actually make the economy more competitive by taking low-wage,
- manual-labor jobs that Americans scorn.
- </p>
- <p> In the Marin County town of San Rafael, north of San Francisco,
- "every day, a few hundred day laborers line the city streets,"
- says Rick Oltman, leader of the Marin Immigration Reform Association.
- "They come here and live 15 or 20 in an apartment and work one
- day a week." Last week the city council shelved a plan to build
- a $175,000 job center for the day laborers. The center, says
- Oltman, "would just encourage more to come here."
- </p>
- <p> A bigger complaint is the cost of social services such as welfare,
- medical care and schooling for immigrants and their children
- who have no right even to be in the country. Assemblyman Richard
- Mountjoy puts the cost to California at $3 billion a year. Though
- some illegals pay taxes, he points out that the money goes mainly
- to Washington, leaving the states to supply the social services
- from inadequate federal reimbursements. "The state is broke,"
- says an aide to Assemblyman Gil Ferguson. "We've had a multibillion-dollar
- deficit three years in a row, and yet we continue to pay medical
- benefits for these illegal immigrants. We take better care of
- them than of our own people."
- </p>
- <p> More than 20 bills have been introduced in the California legislature
- this year to limit benefits to illegals. Mountjoy explains the
- strategy: the state cannot stop them from coming, because policing
- the borders is solely a federal responsibility. So "you have
- to stop the benefits of coming here: the educational benefits,
- the health care, the workmen's compensation." None of the bills
- has yet passed, though one has cleared the state senate. Two
- were defeated in early votes, but Mountjoy and allies vow to
- keep trying to push them through.
- </p>
- <p> Elsewhere in the nation anti-immigrant sentiment is widespread
- but less intense. Asked specifically by pollsters if they favor
- curbing immigration, most people say they do, but when presented
- with a general question as to what they consider the nation's
- most serious problems, only about 2% mention reducing immigration.
- Many people too have very mixed feelings. Even in California
- the most vehement opponents of illegal immigration profess the
- highest regard for those who come to the U.S. legitimately and
- even view them as potential allies. "If you came here and obeyed
- the laws, then you should be on our side, because these people
- compete with the legal immigrant population," says Oltman, the
- Marin County leader. He adds that his own wife is an immigrant--from Belgium.
- </p>
- <p> The politics of immigration has created strange alliances and
- oppositions. Liberal Democrat Eugene McCarthy and Conservative
- Democrat Richard Lamm favor restricting immigration, as does
- archconservative Republican Pat Buchanan. Polls by the Joint
- Center for Political and Economic Studies, a black think tank,
- found that African Americans are far more sympathetic than whites
- to the plight of Haitian refugees, but also far more worried
- than whites about competition from immigrants for jobs. In Florida's
- Dade County, where 60% of the residents are now Spanish-speaking,
- the county commission voted unanimously to repeal a 1980 ordinance
- making English the sole language for official business. But
- their opponents are protesting that the repeal violates an English-only
- amendment to the Florida constitution approved in 1988 by a
- statewide vote of more than 5 to 1.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton Administration officials fear the potential exists for
- immigration to become a hot national issue. They perked up their
- ears when Louisiana Democrat John Breaux, a key figure in Senate
- budget deliberations, told a home-state audience that the U.S.
- could save $8 billion a year by cutting social services to illegal
- immigrants and later repeated the thought, though not the number,
- on national TV. "When a savvy politician like Breaux does that,
- it tells you something," says a White House aide. There is some
- thought that anti-immigrant sentiment is helping Ross Perot
- to drum up opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement,
- which would create a Canada-U.S.-Mexico common market. NAFTA
- does not deal with immigration, and Perot has not mentioned
- the subject. But some analysts think he is tapping, deliberately
- or not, into a vein of anti-Mexican sentiment fed largely by
- illegal immigration.
- </p>
- <p> The biggest reason for fearing a nationwide backlash is that
- illegal entries keep going up, despite government attempts to
- reduce them. The Immigration Control Act of 1986, which imposed
- criminal penalties on employers who knowingly hire illegal aliens,
- stanched the flow just briefly. Arrests by the U.S. Border Patrol
- along the U.S.-Mexican frontier dropped from 1.7 million in
- the year before the act took effect, to 890,000 three years
- later. But the number has climbed back to 1.2 million a year.
- As a rule of thumb two or three illegals get away for every
- one who is caught, so aliens from Mexico alone might total 4
- million a year--equal to the population of Philadelphia.
- </p>
- <p> The law's principal authors, Wyoming Republican Senator Alan
- Simpson and Kentucky Democratic Representative Romano Mazzoli,
- readily concede their creation needs strengthening. They are
- among a number of legislators who
- have introduced bills to tighten procedures for political asylum
- in particular. That, however, would not help much; asylum seekers
- account for only about 10% of all people coming into the country.
- Given the tendency of immigration reform to splinter standard
- voting blocs into unpredictable fragments, legislators are not
- likely to push for far-reaching change until more of their countrymen
- demand it.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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