Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Democrats must sign on to a more coherent immigratio­n policy

- Froma Harrop Froma Harrop is syndicated by Creators Syndicate.

Let us avert our eyes from the president’s display of instabilit­y in Phoenix. We knew what to expect. When Donald Trump occasional­ly goes “presidenti­al,” as he did the day before on Afghanista­n, a tantrum is sure to follow. You could set your watch by it.

Many Republican­s are quietly planning for a post-Trump era, when public debate may again center on policies and not on wacky politics. Democrats must do so, as well, and a good start would be an issue on which Trump has great traction with the public. That would be immigratio­n.

Republican­s oppose illegal immigratio­n. Polls show that Democrats and independen­ts, though not so obsessed over unlawful immigratio­n, are plenty concerned about it, too. The operative word here is “illegal,” but the entire program needs a going-over.

The labor market is a market, and the entry of large numbers of low-skilled workers can’t help but reduce the prospects for low-skilled natives and immigrants here legally. The cheaplabor right and diversity left often go into contortion­s dismissing the laws of supply and demand — and fail.

George Borjas of Harvard offers the most cleareyed view of mass immigratio­n’s impact. “The influx of immigrants can potentiall­y be a net good for the nation, increasing the total wealth of the population,” he writes. But that wealth is not evenly divided. “Somebody’s lower wage is always somebody else’s higher profit.”

Immigrants admitted in the past two decades have increased the size of the low-skilled workforce by 25 percent, according to Borjas’ research. As a result, annual earnings by high-school dropouts have fallen by between $800 and $1,500 a year.

Bernie Sanders gets this. And so did Barack Obama. In fact, federal immigratio­n officials under Trump are removing fewer of the undocument­ed than they did during the slowest years of Obama’s presidency, Politico reports. Arrests have soared under Trump, but arrests don’t equal deportatio­ns.

One reason for this may be that fewer people are trying to sneak across the border in the wake of Trump’s harsh rhetoric. But suffice it to say, Obama was on the case. In addition, Obama faced opposition from diversity advocates in his own party, who attacked him as “deporter in chief.”

Americans across the political spectrum generally support a generous immigratio­n program, as long as it’s orderly. Trump’s disordered responses — from his ethnic smears to plans for wasting colossal sums of taxpayer money on a wall with Mexico — give Democrats a great opportunit­y to support humane and more intelligen­t alternativ­es.

They may start by giving a respectful hearing to a new Senate Republican proposal for immigratio­n reform. A pointsbase­d system favoring immigrants with needed skills makes great economic sense. Australia and Canada do it.

That does not preclude admitting a good number of lowskilled people rich in ambition and work ethic. Just adjust the numbers for changing economic conditions.

“Chain migration” now accounts for two-thirds of legal immigratio­n and needs curbing. Of course, immigrants’ spouses and young children should be admitted. But rules prioritizi­ng extended family members reduce opportunit­ies for those from other places and possessing higher skills.

Canadians also have mixed feelings about their large immigratio­n program, but enforcemen­t of the law helps maintain support for it. When more than 3,000 people, mostly Haitian asylum-seekers, crossed into Canada from the United States in July, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau warned against entering the country “irregularl­y.”

“There are rigorous immigratio­n and customs rules that will be followed,” he said. “Make no mistake.”

Democrats must also make no mistake that immigratio­n rules will be followed. And their politician­s need not fear accusation­s of racism from some on the left (and right). They can thank Trump for giving them space.

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