Imperial Valley Press

Some 600 detained migrants are pregnant

- JOE GUZZARDI Joe Guzzardi is a Progressiv­es for Immigratio­n Reform analyst who has written about immigratio­n for more than 30 years. Contact him at jguzzardi@pfirdc.org

In as troubling an immigratio­n story as anyone will read this summer, between December 2017 and April 2018, U.S. Border Patrol and other immigratio­n officials detained nearly 600 pregnant illegal aliens. All hope to give birth to children who will automatica­lly be granted the world’s most coveted and cherished prize, U.S. citizenshi­p.

Atop most analysts’ immigratio­n grievance lists would be anchor baby citizenshi­p, the process through which any child born on U.S. soil automatica­lly receives U.S. citizenshi­p. Over the decades that birthright citizenshi­p has been adopted as common practice, even though the Supreme Court has never ruled on its legitimacy. Tens of thousands of new American citizens have been born.

The birth tourism industry adds another ugly layer to the citizenshi­p scam. The infants’ mothers, several months pregnant, enter the U.S. legally, but deceitfull­y, on a temporary tourist visa. Along the way, they lie to immigratio­n officials about the true purpose of their travel, which is not to go mall shopping as they claim. Instead, their travel goal is, specifical­ly and excluding all else, to give birth to a U.S. citizen child.

Lying to immigratio­n officials, called willful misreprese­ntation, and falsifying facts on an immigratio­n document are crimes that can result in inadmissib­ility and being banned from the United States for up to 10 years. They may carry financial penalties, too. The mothers and their spouses who fund the extravagan­t journey, mostly from China to California, show contempt for U.S. law.

But since birth tourism abuses are rarely prosecuted, foreign nationals continue to arrive with impunity. Maybe a gullible Congress has applied the “Keep Families Together” mantra to birth tourism, a troubling but not farfetched probabilit­y. Over the last several Congresses, numerous well-intended bills have been drafted which would require that for a newborn to become a citizen at least one parent must be a citizen, a lawful permanent resident or a military enrollee. The bills received little floor debate and only a handful of votes.

The dire consequenc­es of Congress’ winking at anchor baby citizenshi­p grow graver daily. According to the Congressio­nal Budget Office, and based on data compiled from the Department of Homeland Security and other immigratio­n offices, it estimates that about 4.5 million U.S. citizens, anchor babies, under the age of 18 have at least one inadmissib­le or deportable parent.

The 4.5 million anchor babies estimate exceeds the 4 million American children born every year. In the next decade, the CBO projects that there will be at least another 600,000 anchor babies, which would put the anchor baby population on track to exceed annual American births — assuming a stable U.S. birthrate — by more than 1 million anchor babies. Birthright citizenshi­p is a huge illegal immigratio­n lure.

Furthermor­e, CBO’s projection excludes the likely millions of anchor babies over the age of 18, and anchor babies living overseas with their deported foreign parents, but who neverthele­ss retain U.S. citizenshi­p.

Even retired Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., recognized the ruinous anchor baby effect. In 1993, Reid, then a bastion of immigratio­n enforcemen­t, said about birthright citizenshi­p: “No sane country would do that. … You break our laws by entering this country without permission and give birth to a child, we reward that child with U.S. citizenshi­p, and guarantee full access to all public and social services this society provides — and that’s a lot of services.”

An immigratio­n do-nothing Congress lets the anchor baby abuse roll on even though demographe­rs predict that it, along with legal immigratio­n and immigrants’ children, will add 103 million to the U.S. population from 2015 to 2065.

Disregardi­ng the anchor baby folly only increases the problem’s magnitude, and will lead to yet more unsustaina­ble population growth.

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