Arab Times

Look to past for root of ‘immigratio­n woes’

‘It’s a 30-year problem’

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WASHINGTON, Aug 23, (AP): For more than a decade, lawmakers have been pointing at their counterpar­ts to take the blame for what just about everyone agrees is a broken immigratio­n system.

Republican­s say President Barack Obama’s immigratio­n enforcemen­t policies encourage more people to sneak into the country. Democrats blame Republican­s for blocking legislatio­n that would allow people already here to gain legal status and create a path for future, legal immigratio­n.

But whatever specific policies are being fought over now, immigratio­n experts say the problem took root at least 30 years ago, when President Ronald Reagan signed a 1986 immigratio­n law that has become known as the “Reagan Amnesty” and allowed roughly 3 million people in the country illegally to gain legal status.

Immigratio­n laws were overhauled again in 1990 under Republican president George H.W. Bush and again in 1996 under Democratic president Bill Clinton.

Obama has tried in his eight years in office to overhaul them once again, but nothing has passed.

Republican presidenti­al nominee Donald Trump has said he will fix the system, build a wall along the border with Mexico and perhaps deport many of the estimated 11 million people living in the country illegally. But this week he has indicated he may back off from that idea.

“We’re going to build the wall, and we’re going to stop it. It’s going to end,” Trump said earlier this year. “We’re going to have a big, beautiful wall.”

Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton, meanwhile, has pledged to push comprehens­ive immigratio­n reform and to act on her own, as Obama has, if Congress doesn’t approve such a measure.

Blame

Trump and Clinton have laid the blame for the current state of immigratio­n — and the estimated 11 million people living and, in many cases, working illegally in the United States — on the other party. But experts disagree. “I think there’s a lot of blame to go around and spread around for decades,” said Mark Krikorian, executive director for the conservati­ve Center For Immigratio­n Studies. “There isn’t one person responsibl­e.”

Instead, he said, the problem lies in how the Immigratio­n Control and Reform Act of 1986 was implemente­d. He described the passage of the bill as something of a “con-job” that allowed millions of immigrants in the country illegally to have legal status with a promise of workplace enforcemen­t and other measures to curb future illegal immigratio­n.

But that didn’t happen, he said. And there was little incentive to follow through on promises of strict workplace enforcemen­t, he said, once millions of people were legalized.

“I definitely view this as the 30year problem,” said Doris Meissner, who headed the now-defunct Immigratio­n and Naturaliza­tion Service under Bill Clinton and is now a senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute in Washington.

The 1986 law was intended to create a new era of enforcemen­t, including strict enforcemen­t of the new law that barred employers from hiring workers who don’t have permission to work in the United States.

Stringent

Thirty years later that stringent workplace enforcemen­t, and mandated use of the government’s E-Verify system for employers to check the legal work status of prospectiv­e hires, is still being debated by lawmakers and the business community. Multiple iterations of federal legislatio­n to require employment verificati­on have been defeated in Congress.

Meissner said the ability of people in the country illegally to continue to find work during the economic boom of the 1990s was a significan­t incentive for more to come.

And while an average of about 1.3 million people a year were caught crossing the border illegally over the decade of the 1990s, the Border Patrol was relatively small, not growing above a force of 10,000 until 2002.

Meissner says part of the problem was the two immigratio­n laws that followed in 1990 and 1996 that she said did very little to create a legal path to the United States for lowskilled workers. The government does have a pair of visa programs for seasonal agricultur­e workers and others who are considered seasonal, nonagricul­tural workers, but Meissner and other critics of the program argue that it is not sufficient.

“There is no line to get into,” Meissner said. “This is why at the end of the day we need updated laws, we need immigratio­n reform.”

Instead, she said, the focus was on enforcemen­t and making it easier to deport immigrants in the country illegally.

As that happened, the estimated population of people living in the country illegally rose from a few million in the late 1980s and early 1990s to today’s estimated 11 million people.

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