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- <text id=94TT1339>
- <title>
- Oct. 03, 1994: Politics:Keep Out You Tired You Poor
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 03, 1994 Blinksmanship
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- POLITICS, Page 46
- Keep Out, You Tired, You Poor...</hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Around the country, and especially in California, outrage over
- immigration is becoming electoral dynamite
- </p>
- <p>By Nancy Gibbs--Reported by Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles and Michael Duffy/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Senator Dianne Feinstein makes an implausible undercover agent,
- which made her recent experiment in black-market-document procurement
- all the more persuasive. The California Democrat decided to
- find out for herself just how easy it would be to get a fake
- green card and driver's license. So she traded her Hermes scarf
- for some urban camouflage--in this case, a gabardine pantsuit--and went shopping in MacArthur Park, a crime-infested mini-mall
- for phony immigration documents near downtown Los Angeles. Never
- mind that the patrician politician went trailing a swarm of
- agents in dark suits; the fake IDs were hers for the asking.
- "They would have cost anywhere from $10 to $60," she says, "and
- I could have had them within the hour."
- </p>
- <p> Feinstein was prescient enough to make illegal immigration a
- pet issue, which gives her some political cover in her unexpectedly
- tight race against conservative Santa Barbara Congressman Michael
- Huffington. But the same cannot be said of Democrat Kathleen
- Brown, who in a struggle to unseat Governor Pete Wilson finds
- herself slipping over what has become the most hazardous issue
- of the 1994 elections. If California runs true to form, leading
- America's social revolutions through the ballot box, it will
- pass Proposition 187, an implacable, baldly unconstitutional
- plan to cut off services to illegal immigrants, from schools
- to health care to welfare. Wilson strongly endorses the measure;
- Brown emphatically opposes it, and at the moment that puts her
- at odds with as many as 3 out of 5 California voters.
- </p>
- <p> Proposition 187 is truly a referendum for the 1990s: if successful,
- the initiative will constitute a dramatic statement by voters
- that if the government does not move to solve the immigration
- problem, the people will. In a country built by immigrants,
- it is a measure of the deep dissatisfaction with the generosity
- of the welfare state that the public has seized on aliens as
- the enemy within. A TIME/CNN poll determined last week that
- 77% of those surveyed felt the government was not doing enough
- to keep out illegal immigrants. For years now, the battle has
- raged between the federal authorities who are supposed to police
- the borders and the states who pay the price if they fail. Hoping
- for some ammunition, the Clinton Administration helped fund
- a study by the Urban Institute that for the first time assesses
- the costs of immigration. The study found that illegals drain
- about $2 billion a year for incarceration, schooling and Medicaid
- from the budgets of such major destination states as Texas,
- Florida and California. But the survey also discerned that for
- the country as a whole, legal and illegal immigrants generate
- a $25 billion to $30 billion surplus from the income and property
- taxes they pay.
- </p>
- <p> That finding has not prevented angry Democratic and Republican
- Governors from demanding that Washington pay up. Lawton Chiles
- of Florida has already filed suit in a Miami federal court against
- the U.S. Government for "its continuing failure to enforce or
- rationally administer its own immigration laws since 1980."
- The suit asks for $1.5 billion in compensation. "So far, all
- we've got is a lot of hand wringing," says Chiles. Governors
- in Texas, Arizona and California are taking Washington to court
- as well.
- </p>
- <p> Particularly in California, the fight reflects two very different
- views of immigration. Brown and her team have concluded that
- immigrants come streaming across the border seeking jobs with
- which to help their families and climb into the middle class.
- Wilson, on the other hand, argues that the immigrants are mainly
- attracted by the bounty of welfare benefits. These views yield
- opposite solutions: Wilson wants to stem the flow by curtailing
- the services. Brown prefers clamping down on the illegal workplace.
- </p>
- <p> The Governor raised the temperature even higher last week, when
- he demanded an immediate "down payment" of $1.8 billion from
- Washington. Wilson argues that California, with 43% of the country's
- illegal aliens, pays multiple costs for its leaky borders: the
- number of illegal-immigrant felons has tripled to nearly 18,000
- since 1988. The percentage of illegal-immigrant children in
- public schools rose to nearly 10%, or 308,000 students; providing
- health care for illegal immigrants costs state taxpayers $400
- million.
- </p>
- <p> Passing Proposition 187--known as the "Save our State" initiative--would send a message to Washington that "we cannot educate
- every child from here to Tierra del Fuego," Wilson says. The
- proposition is breathtaking in its scope: it would render all
- illegal aliens ineligible for such state social services as
- welfare, food stamps and health care--except the emergency
- care required by federal law--and all public schooling, from
- kindergarten to state colleges and universities. State and local
- agencies would be required to report suspected illegals to the
- state attorney general and the Immigration and Naturalization
- Service, and the sale of false documents would become a state
- felony.
- </p>
- <p> When it comes to schools, the initiative could prove to be more
- symbol than substance, given an enormous catch. In 1982 the
- Supreme Court ruled that public education is guaranteed to all
- children in the U.S. and that denying schooling to illegal immigrants
- violates the Constitution. The backers of 187 are perfectly
- aware of the legal obstacle and intend to use it as a vehicle
- for testing the law. As Wilson emphasized, "the save-our-state
- initiative is the two-by-four we need to make them take notice
- in Washington and provoke a legal challenge that will go all
- the way to the Supreme Court."
- </p>
- <p> Though popular opinion is running with Wilson, Brown calls him
- a hypocrite for denouncing what he himself helped create while
- serving in Washington. In deference to his supporters in the
- agribusiness community, she says, "he was the leader in the
- U.S. Senate, fighting for the biggest loophole that has allowed
- in more than 1 million illegal immigrants, the `seasonal worker'
- program." Proposition 187, she claims, will only make a bad
- situation worse, by throwing tens of thousands of children out
- of school and onto the streets where they will be trapped by
- "gangs, guns, drugs and graffiti."
- </p>
- <p> Her allies in the Latino community, the powerful teachers' union
- and the medical community charge that Prop 187 would turn educators,
- doctors and social workers into immigration cops. A better approach,
- Brown argues, is for Washington to beef up its border patrols
- and tighten enforcement of existing laws. The Clinton Administration
- has been happy to oblige; two weeks ago, Attorney General Janet
- Reno chose Los Angeles for the unveiling of Operation Gatekeeper,
- a strategy to curb illegal immigration along the California-Baja
- California border, for years a prime smuggling corridor for
- people, drugs, guns, whiskey and consumer goods. Reno was quick
- to note that under the new crime bill and other Clinton proposals,
- California will receive "unprecedented levels of federal aid...to defray the costs associated with immigration."
- </p>
- <p> Reno's suddenly aggressive stance just confirms that the whole
- immigration struggle is playing out against a backdrop of presidential
- and midterm politics. Wilson has fought back from a 23-point
- deficit to take a tenuous seven-point lead in the Governor's
- race. That unnerves the White House, not only because Wilson
- has been such an outspoken critic of the President, but also
- because his strength in the Golden State makes him a threat
- in 1996. Without California's 54 electoral votes, Clinton cannot
- win re-election.
- </p>
- <p> But he also cannot win if he carves his base in half. "The Administration,"
- said an official, "has tried to help the anti-proposition forces
- without pitting Clinton against California's white middle class.
- But at some point you risk alienating a key part of your base.
- That's the political dilemma the Democrats are in." Clinton
- may have solved his "Florida problem" for the moment by muscling
- Castro and invading Haiti, but neither strategy would work on
- Mexico, which means the federal money will keep flowing until
- the votes are in.
- </p>
- <p> QUESTION: Do you favor a proposal to stop providing government
- health benefits and public education to illegal immigrants and
- their children?
- </p>
- <table>
- <tblhdr><cell><cell>Sept. 1993<cell>Sept. 21-22 1994
- <row><cell type=a>Favor<cell type=i>47%<cell type=i>55%
- <row><cell>Oppose<cell>48%<cell>38%
- </table>
- <p> From a telephone poll of 800 adult Americans taken for
- TIME/CNN on Sept. 21-22 by Yankelovich Partners Inc. Sampling
- error is plus or minus 3.5%. Not Sures omitted.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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