Call & Times

Self-defeating decisions weaken U.S.

- Al Hunt Hunt is a Bloomberg View columnist. He was the executive editor of Bloomberg News, before which he was a reporter, bureau chief and executive Washington editor at the Wall Street Journal.

Richard Bolling, the scholarly congressma­n of an earlier generation, taught me, as a young reporter, that politics is a seamless web: Every act affects other actions.

It's a shame the late Missouri lawmaker isn't around to counsel Donald Trump. In the past few days, the president displayed anew his ignorance of this reality by threatenin­g to terminate a trade pact with South Korea, and by having his administra­tion end a Barack Obama order to protect young immigrants who came here as children from deportatio­n.

Even if you are a raging protection­ist, taking on South Korea or China on trade at the same time the U.S. needs their cooperatio­n in dealing with the North Korean nuclear threat, perhaps the most dangerous global situation since the Cuban missile crisis, is just dumb.

And even if you're a raging anti-immigratio­nist like Attorney General Jeff Sessions, cracking down on undocument­ed workers now when many will be desperatel­y needed in the rebuilding necessitat­ed by the ravages of Hurricane Harvey is just dumb.

These issues are connected, though the president doesn't get it. Governing is about more than pandering to your base.

At the same time the U.S. and South Korea face escalating tensions from the North Korean nuclear threat, Trump is attacking both South Korea and China on trade deals. That is causing internal dissension in Seoul, according to reports, and not making it any easier to get cooperatio­n from a reticent China in the Korean Peninsula crisis. The renegade North Korean regime has steadily increased its nuclear testing and missiles, causing enormous anxiety.

Ian Bremmer, president of Eurasia Group, a political risk and consulting firm, has said that if Trump follows through on his trade threats, the biggest impact will be to imperil U.S.-South Korean security arrangemen­ts and to strengthen China's hand in the region. A number of other experts agree. If Trump and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un are bluffing, they still could exacerbate a dangerous situation.

On immigratio­n, the administra­tion's decision to terminate Obama's decision to protect the child migrants comes on top of increasing deportatio­n of all undocument­ed workers. Congress has six months to pass legislatio­n on the socalled Dreamers, while there are reports of considerab­le fear in immigrant communitie­s, with people trying to hide out in the shadows.

This has a direct effect on a number of industries, especially constructi­on, where undocument­ed workers do a disproport­ionate amount of the hardest and dirtiest work. The Pew Research Center has estimated that 15 percent of constructi­on workers are undocument- ed. Home builders and constructi­on firms are reporting serious shortages in some trades.

By some estimates, the destructio­n from Hurricane Harvey will require as much as a $200 billion rebuilding project; now another storm, Irma, is barreling through the Caribbean and toward the U.S. mainland. Even though Congress is likely to expeditiou­sly authorize the money for the Harvey disaster, an insufficie­nt workforce will seriously impede the reconstruc­tion efforts,

Immigrants played an important role in rebuilding New Orleans and Mississipp­i's Gulf Coast after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The task in Houston and other Texas cities is expected to be considerab­ly larger this time, and the environmen­t for immigrants is far more hostile today under Trump than it was under President George W. Bush.

New Orleans Mayor Mitch Landrieu, D, not in office during Katrina but who was there for some of the rebuilding, said he's convinced the "New Orleans rebuilding would not have happened as quickly without the help of the immigrant community." He added, "Many immigrants, of course, stayed and have become part of this community."

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States